Elias Grünewald

Postdoctoral Researcher

Charité

The projects of

Elias Grünewald

C01

Detecting

Targeting

Individualized data-driven light intervention in intensive care unit patients

Circadian rhythms are often disrupted in critically ill patients, worsening outcomes. Non-invasive detection and normalization in the ICU are not yet implemented. This project integrates high-resolution patient data with dynamic light therapy to restore circadian rhythms.

Individualized data-driven light intervention in intensive care unit patients

Circadian rhythms are often disrupted in critically ill patients, worsening outcomes. Non-invasive detection and normalization in the ICU are not yet implemented. This project integrates high-resolution patient data with dynamic light therapy to restore circadian rhythms.

The publications of

Elias Grünewald

Detecting

Digital biomarkers in non-communicable diseases

June 15, 2026

BIOMARKERS

Digital biomarkers—objective, quantifiable physiological and behavioral measures collected through digital tools—enable continuous health assessment and hold promise for precision medicine. With non-communicable diseases (NCDs) being the leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, digital biomarkers can provide early detection, continuous monitoring, and individualized care. This review examines advances in digital biomarkers across NCD domains, including endocrinology, cardiology, respiratory medicine, neurology, and mental health, with a focus on wearable technologies that continuously capture real-world behavior and physiology. Continuous glucose monitoring in diabetes exemplifies successful clinical translation, while digital biomarkers in cardiology, respiratory medicine, and neurology are at varying stages of validation and adoption. Most digital biomarkers across internal medicine, neurology, and mental health remain in early validation stages. Critical barriers to implementation include limited validation in diverse populations, lack of interoperability, insufficient integration with electronic health records, challenges in multimodal data synthesis, and underdeveloped regulatory pathways. Equity concerns persist as infrastructure, affordability, and capacity-building needs vary globally.Bridging the gap between consumer self-tracking and clinically validated, guideline-compatible digital biomarkers requires rigorous multicenter validation, standardized interfaces, open data models, secure and ethical data infrastructures, and equitable design. Coordinated efforts addressing these challenges are essential to enable digital biomarkers to improve prevention, diagnosis, and management of NCDs.