arXiv:2603.27017v2 Announce Type: replace
Abstract: Body Mass Index (BMI) is a widely accessible but imprecise proxy of cardiometabolic health. While assessing true body composition is superior, gold-standard methods like Dual-Energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DXA) are not scalable. We address this gap by developing and validating “PhotoScan,” a method to estimate body composition from smartphone imagery. We pretrained a deep learning model on UK Biobank participants (N=35,323) and fine-tuned on a newly recruited clinical cohort (PhotoBIA cohort, N=677) with diverse ethnicity, age, and body fat distribution, achieving high accuracy against DXA for total body fat percentage (BF%, MAE = 2.15%), Android-to-Gynoid fat ratio (A/G, MAE = 0.11), and visceral-to-subcutaneous fat area ratio (V/S, MAE = 0.09). Generalizability of the model was demonstrated on an independent metabolic health study cohort (MetabolicMosaic cohort, N=132 participants), achieving MAEs of 2.13% for BF%, 0.09 for A/G, and 0.09 for V/S. We then evaluated the clinical utility of these metrics in the MetabolicMosaic cohort by predicting insulin resistance (IR). Adding PhotoScan-derived body composition metrics to baseline demographics model (Age, Sex, BMI) significantly improved insulin resistance classification (Area Under the Receiver Operating Characteristic Curve “AUROC” 76.0% vs 69.2%, DeLong test p=0.002, Net Reclassification Index “NRI” 0.593). Crucially, this accessible smartphone method achieved performance nearly equivalent to adding clinical-grade DXA data to baseline demographics model (AUROC 77.3% vs 69.2%, DeLong test p=0.004, NRI 0.748). These findings demonstrate that smartphone-based phenotyping captures clinically meaningful risk signals missed by BMI and anthropometrics, offering a scalable alternative to DXA for cardiometabolic risk stratification.
Bioethical considerations in deploying mobile mental health apps in LMIC settings: insights from the MITHRA pilot study in rural India
IntroductionIn India, untreated depression among women contributes significantly to morbidity and mortality, underscoring an urgent need for accessible and ethically grounded mental health interventions. Mobile



