Clinical Utility and Feasibility of Smartphone-based EEG in Kenya: A Multicenter Observational Study
Nomin Enkhtsetseg, William Lehn-Schi{\o}ler, Anton Mosquera Storgaard, Magnus Guldberg Pedersen, Dylan Rice, George Wambugu, Nshimiyimana Jules Fidele, Melita Cacic Hribljan, Anca Alina Arbune, Sidsel Armand Larsen, Sandor Beniczky, Farrah J. Mateen

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that smartphone-based EEG systems are feasible and effective for large-scale neurological assessment in resource-limited settings like Kenya, enabling trained healthcare workers to acquire and interpret EEG data remotely.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence supporting the clinical utility and feasibility of smartphone-based EEG in LMICs through a multicenter observational study.
Findings
96% of recordings were interpretable
30.2% of interpretable recordings showed abnormalities
Mean interpretation turnaround time was 107 minutes
Abstract
Purpose: Access to electroencephalography (EEG) remains limited across low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) due to cost, infrastructure requirements, and a shortage of trained staff. This study evaluated the feasibility and clinical utility of a smartphone-based EEG system in a real-world setting. Methods: We conducted a multicenter observational study (November 2023 to April 2026) across 29 clinical sites in Kenya. A smartphone-based 27-lead EEG system enabled trained healthcare workers to acquire standardized recordings with remote expert interpretation. Results: 3,036 EEG sessions were performed. Male patients constituted 57.8% of the cohort, with representation across pediatric and adult populations. The most common referral indication was seizures or convulsions (68.5%). Overall, 2,915 (96%) recordings were interpretable, while 121 (4%) were uninterpretable, primarily due…
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