Vital Signs Monitoring with Wearable Sensors in High-risk Surgical Patients A Clinical Validation Study

被引:90
作者
Breteler, Martine J. M. [1 ,2 ]
KleinJan, Eline J. [1 ,3 ]
Dohmen, Daan A. J. [2 ]
Leenen, Luke P. H. [4 ,6 ]
van Hillegersberg, Richard [5 ]
Ruurda, Jelle P. [5 ]
van Loon, Kim [1 ]
Blokhuis, Taco J. [7 ]
Kalkman, Cor J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Utrecht, Univ Med Ctr Utrecht, Dept Anesthesiol, Utrecht, Netherlands
[2] FocusCura, Driebergen Rijsenburg, Netherlands
[3] Univ Twente, Dept Tech Med, Enschede, Netherlands
[4] Univ Med Ctr Utrecht, Dept Trauma Surg, Utrecht, Netherlands
[5] Univ Med Ctr Utrecht, Dept Gastrointestinal & Oncol Surg, Utrecht, Netherlands
[6] Univ Med Ctr Utrecht Utrecht, Mail Stop Q-04-2-313,POB 85500, NL-3508 GA Utrecht, Netherlands
[7] Maastricht Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Surg, Maastricht, Netherlands
基金
欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
RAPID RESPONSE TEAMS; EARLY RECOGNITION; AFFERENT LIMB; SYSTEMS; STAFF; ANTECEDENTS; MORTALITY; AGREEMENT; ACCURACY; FAILURE;
D O I
10.1097/ALN.0000000000003029
中图分类号
R614 [麻醉学];
学科分类号
100217 ;
摘要
Background: Vital signs are usually recorded once every 8 h in patients at the hospital ward. Early signs of deterioration may therefore be missed. Wireless sensors have been developed that may capture patient deterioration earlier. The objective of this study was to determine whether two wearable patch sensors (SensiumVitals [Sensium Healthcare Ltd., United Kingdom] and HealthPatch [VitalConnect, USA]), a bed-based system (EarlySense [EarlySense Ltd., Israel]), and a patient-worn monitor (Masimo Radius-7 [Masimo Corporation, USA]) can reliably measure heart rate (HR) and respiratory rate (RR) continuously in patients recovering from major surgery. Methods: In an observational method comparison study, HR and RR of high-risk surgical patients admitted to a step-down unit were simultaneously recorded with the devices under test and compared with an intensive care unit-grade monitoring system (XPREZZON [Spacelabs Healthcare, USA]) until transition to the ward. Outcome measures were 95% limits of agreement and bias. Clarke Error Grid analysis was performed to assess the ability to assist with correct treatment decisions. In addition, data loss and duration of data gaps were analyzed. Results: Twenty-five high-risk surgical patients were included. More than 700 h of data were available for analysis. For HR, bias and limits of agreement were 1.0 (-6.3, 8.4), 1.3 (-0.5, 3.3), -1.4 (-5.1, 2.3), and -0.4 (-4.0, 3.1) for SensiumVitals, HealthPatch, EarlySense, and Masimo, respectively. For RR, these values were -0.8 (-7.4, 5.6), 0.4 (-3.9, 4.7), and 0.2 (-4.7, 4.4) respectively. HealthPatch overestimated RR, with a bias of 4.4 (limits: -4.4 to 13.3) breaths/minute. Data loss from wireless transmission varied from 13% (83 of 633 h) to 34% (122 of 360 h) for RR and 6% (47 of 727 h) to 27% (182 of 664 h) for HR. Conclusions: All sensors were highly accurate for HR. For RR, the EarlySense, SensiumVitals sensor, and Masimo Radius-7 were reasonably accurate for RR. The accuracy for RR of the HealthPatch sensor was outside acceptable limits. Trend monitoring with wearable sensors could be valuable to timely detect patient deterioration.
引用
收藏
页码:424 / 439
页数:16
相关论文
共 46 条
[1]   Is everyone really breathing 20 times a minute? Assessing epidemiology and variation in recorded respiratory rate in hospitalised adults [J].
Badawy, Jack ;
Oanh Kieu Nguyen ;
Clark, Christopher ;
Halm, Ethan A. ;
Makam, Anil N. .
BMJ QUALITY & SAFETY, 2017, 26 (10) :832-836
[2]  
Beckett Dj, 2009, Acute Med, V8, P33
[3]  
Ben-Ari J., 2010, Journal of Medical Engineering & Technology, V34, P393, DOI 10.3109/03091902.2010.503308
[4]   Agreement between methods of measurement with multiple observations per individual [J].
Bland, J. Martin ;
Altman, Douglas G. .
JOURNAL OF BIOPHARMACEUTICAL STATISTICS, 2007, 17 (04) :571-582
[5]   Postanesthesia care by remote monitoring of vital signs in surgical wards [J].
Boer, Christa ;
Touw, Hugo R. ;
Loer, Stephan A. .
CURRENT OPINION IN ANESTHESIOLOGY, 2018, 31 (06) :716-722
[6]   Reliability of wireless monitoring using a wearable patch sensor in high-risk surgical patients at a step-down unit in the Netherlands: a clinical validation study [J].
Breteler, Martine J. M. ;
Huizinga, Erik ;
van Loon, Kim ;
Leenen, Luke P. H. ;
Dohmen, Daan A. J. ;
Kalkman, Cor J. ;
Blokhuis, Taco J. .
BMJ OPEN, 2018, 8 (02)
[7]   Association between clinically abnormal observations and subsequent in-hospital mortality: a prospective study [J].
Buist, M ;
Bernard, S ;
Nguyen, TV ;
Moore, G ;
Anderson, J .
RESUSCITATION, 2004, 62 (02) :137-141
[8]   The impact of Rapid Response System on delayed emergency team activation patient characteristics and outcomes-A follow-up study [J].
Calzavacca, Paolo ;
Licari, Elisa ;
Tee, Augustine ;
Egi, Moritoki ;
Downey, Andrew ;
Quach, Jon ;
Haase-Fielitz, Anja ;
Haase, Michael ;
Bellomo, Rinaldo .
RESUSCITATION, 2010, 81 (01) :31-35
[9]   Vital signs monitoring and nurse-patient interaction: A qualitative observational study of hospital practice [J].
Cardona-Morrell, M. ;
Prgomet, M. ;
Lake, R. ;
Nicholson, M. ;
Harrison, R. ;
Long, J. ;
Westbrook, J. ;
Braithwaite, J. ;
Hillman, K. .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING STUDIES, 2016, 56 :9-16
[10]  
Chan AM, 2013, IEEE ENG MED BIO, P4058, DOI 10.1109/EMBC.2013.6610436