Mobility is a cornerstone of health and quality of life, particularly in older adults. Digital mobility outcomes (DMOs) from real-world walking data offer crucial insights into the functional status and early markers of mobility decline. This study provides reference values for walking activity, pace, rhythm, and gait bout-to-bout variability in community-dwelling older adults and evaluates the effects of age, sex, height, and weight on these parameters. Using data from 200 older adults (aged 65–94 years) from the InCHIANTI Study and applying the Mobilise-D computational pipeline, we analyzed real-world walking over a week. Significant differences by sex and age were found, with males showing higher walking activity in younger age groups (65–74 and 75–84 years) but not in the oldest group (85–94 years). Additionally, we observed non-linear trends in mobility metrics with age, indicating an accelerated reduction in mobility at certain age ranges. These findings underscore the importance of monitoring real-world walking data to pinpoint critical periods of mobility decline and guide targeted interventions. This work offers valuable benchmarks for clinical assessments and future research.

Albites-Sanabria, J., Palumbo, P., Bandinelli, S., D'Ascanio, I., Mellone, S., Paraschiv-Ionescu, A., et al. (2025). Walking into aging: real-world mobility patterns and digital benchmarks from the InCHIANTI Study. NPJ AGING, 11(1), 1-11 [10.1038/s41514-025-00245-w].

Walking into aging: real-world mobility patterns and digital benchmarks from the InCHIANTI Study

Albites-Sanabria, Jose
Primo
;
Palumbo, Pierpaolo
Secondo
;
D'Ascanio, Ilaria;Mellone, Sabato;Cereatti, Andrea;Chiari, Lorenzo
Penultimo
;
Palmerini, Luca
Ultimo
2025

Abstract

Mobility is a cornerstone of health and quality of life, particularly in older adults. Digital mobility outcomes (DMOs) from real-world walking data offer crucial insights into the functional status and early markers of mobility decline. This study provides reference values for walking activity, pace, rhythm, and gait bout-to-bout variability in community-dwelling older adults and evaluates the effects of age, sex, height, and weight on these parameters. Using data from 200 older adults (aged 65–94 years) from the InCHIANTI Study and applying the Mobilise-D computational pipeline, we analyzed real-world walking over a week. Significant differences by sex and age were found, with males showing higher walking activity in younger age groups (65–74 and 75–84 years) but not in the oldest group (85–94 years). Additionally, we observed non-linear trends in mobility metrics with age, indicating an accelerated reduction in mobility at certain age ranges. These findings underscore the importance of monitoring real-world walking data to pinpoint critical periods of mobility decline and guide targeted interventions. This work offers valuable benchmarks for clinical assessments and future research.
2025
Albites-Sanabria, J., Palumbo, P., Bandinelli, S., D'Ascanio, I., Mellone, S., Paraschiv-Ionescu, A., et al. (2025). Walking into aging: real-world mobility patterns and digital benchmarks from the InCHIANTI Study. NPJ AGING, 11(1), 1-11 [10.1038/s41514-025-00245-w].
Albites-Sanabria, Jose; Palumbo, Pierpaolo; Bandinelli, Stefania; D'Ascanio, Ilaria; Mellone, Sabato; Paraschiv-Ionescu, Anisoara; Küderle, Arne; Cere...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/1027491
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