Cargando…

Continuous Noninvasive Remote Automated Blood Pressure Monitoring With Novel Wearable Technology: A Preliminary Validation Study

BACKGROUND: Wearable continuous monitoring biosensor technologies have the potential to transform postoperative care with early detection of impending clinical deterioration. OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to validate the accuracy of Cloud DX Vitaliti continuous vital signs monitor (CVSM) continuous noninva...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: McGillion, Michael H, Dvirnik, Nazari, Yang, Stephen, Belley-Côté, Emilie, Lamy, Andre, Whitlock, Richard, Marcucci, Maura, Borges, Flavia K, Duceppe, Emmanuelle, Ouellette, Carley, Bird, Marissa, Carroll, Sandra L, Conen, David, Tarride, Jean-Eric, Harsha, Prathiba, Scott, Ted, Good, Amber, Gregus, Krysten, Sanchez, Karla, Benoit, Pamela, Owen, Julian, Harvey, Valerie, Peter, Elizabeth, Petch, Jeremy, Vincent, Jessica, Graham, Michelle, Devereaux, P J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8922156/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34876396
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/24916
_version_ 1784669472558153728
author McGillion, Michael H
Dvirnik, Nazari
Yang, Stephen
Belley-Côté, Emilie
Lamy, Andre
Whitlock, Richard
Marcucci, Maura
Borges, Flavia K
Duceppe, Emmanuelle
Ouellette, Carley
Bird, Marissa
Carroll, Sandra L
Conen, David
Tarride, Jean-Eric
Harsha, Prathiba
Scott, Ted
Good, Amber
Gregus, Krysten
Sanchez, Karla
Benoit, Pamela
Owen, Julian
Harvey, Valerie
Peter, Elizabeth
Petch, Jeremy
Vincent, Jessica
Graham, Michelle
Devereaux, P J
author_facet McGillion, Michael H
Dvirnik, Nazari
Yang, Stephen
Belley-Côté, Emilie
Lamy, Andre
Whitlock, Richard
Marcucci, Maura
Borges, Flavia K
Duceppe, Emmanuelle
Ouellette, Carley
Bird, Marissa
Carroll, Sandra L
Conen, David
Tarride, Jean-Eric
Harsha, Prathiba
Scott, Ted
Good, Amber
Gregus, Krysten
Sanchez, Karla
Benoit, Pamela
Owen, Julian
Harvey, Valerie
Peter, Elizabeth
Petch, Jeremy
Vincent, Jessica
Graham, Michelle
Devereaux, P J
author_sort McGillion, Michael H
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Wearable continuous monitoring biosensor technologies have the potential to transform postoperative care with early detection of impending clinical deterioration. OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to validate the accuracy of Cloud DX Vitaliti continuous vital signs monitor (CVSM) continuous noninvasive blood pressure (cNIBP) measurements in postsurgical patients. A secondary aim was to examine user acceptance of the Vitaliti CVSM with respect to comfort, ease of application, sustainability of positioning, and aesthetics. METHODS: Included participants were ≥18 years old and recovering from surgery in a cardiac intensive care unit (ICU). We targeted a maximum recruitment of 80 participants for verification and acceptance testing. We also oversampled to minimize the effect of unforeseen interruptions and other challenges to the study. Validation procedures were according to the International Standards Organization (ISO) 81060-2:2018 standards for wearable, cuffless blood pressure (BP) measuring devices. Baseline BP was determined from the gold-standard ICU arterial catheter. The Vitaliti CVSM was calibrated against the reference arterial catheter. In static (seated in bed) and supine positions, 3 cNIBP measurements, each 30 seconds, were taken for each patient with the Vitaliti CVSM and an invasive arterial catheter. At the conclusion of each test session, captured cNIBP measurements were extracted using MediCollector BEDSIDE data extraction software, and Vitaliti CVSM measurements were extracted to a secure laptop through a cable connection. The errors of these determinations were calculated. Participants were interviewed about device acceptability. RESULTS: The validation analysis included data for 20 patients. The average times from calibration to first measurement in the static position and to first measurement in the supine position were 133.85 seconds (2 minutes 14 seconds) and 535.15 seconds (8 minutes 55 seconds), respectively. The overall mean errors of determination for the static position were –0.621 (SD 4.640) mm Hg for systolic blood pressure (SBP) and 0.457 (SD 1.675) mm Hg for diastolic blood pressure (DBP). Errors of determination were slightly higher for the supine position, at 2.722 (SD 5.207) mm Hg for SBP and 2.650 (SD 3.221) mm Hg for DBP. The majority rated the Vitaliti CVSM as comfortable. This study was limited to evaluation of the device during a very short validation period after calibration (ie, that commenced within 2 minutes after calibration and lasted for a short duration of time). CONCLUSIONS: We found that the Cloud DX’s Vitaliti CVSM demonstrated cNIBP measurement in compliance with ISO 81060-2:2018 standards in the context of evaluation that commenced within 2 minutes of device calibration; this device was also well-received by patients in a postsurgical ICU setting. Future studies will examine the accuracy of the Vitaliti CVSM in ambulatory contexts, with attention to assessment over a longer duration and the impact of excessive patient motion on data artifacts and signal quality. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03493867; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03493867
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8922156
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-89221562022-03-16 Continuous Noninvasive Remote Automated Blood Pressure Monitoring With Novel Wearable Technology: A Preliminary Validation Study McGillion, Michael H Dvirnik, Nazari Yang, Stephen Belley-Côté, Emilie Lamy, Andre Whitlock, Richard Marcucci, Maura Borges, Flavia K Duceppe, Emmanuelle Ouellette, Carley Bird, Marissa Carroll, Sandra L Conen, David Tarride, Jean-Eric Harsha, Prathiba Scott, Ted Good, Amber Gregus, Krysten Sanchez, Karla Benoit, Pamela Owen, Julian Harvey, Valerie Peter, Elizabeth Petch, Jeremy Vincent, Jessica Graham, Michelle Devereaux, P J JMIR Mhealth Uhealth Original Paper BACKGROUND: Wearable continuous monitoring biosensor technologies have the potential to transform postoperative care with early detection of impending clinical deterioration. OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to validate the accuracy of Cloud DX Vitaliti continuous vital signs monitor (CVSM) continuous noninvasive blood pressure (cNIBP) measurements in postsurgical patients. A secondary aim was to examine user acceptance of the Vitaliti CVSM with respect to comfort, ease of application, sustainability of positioning, and aesthetics. METHODS: Included participants were ≥18 years old and recovering from surgery in a cardiac intensive care unit (ICU). We targeted a maximum recruitment of 80 participants for verification and acceptance testing. We also oversampled to minimize the effect of unforeseen interruptions and other challenges to the study. Validation procedures were according to the International Standards Organization (ISO) 81060-2:2018 standards for wearable, cuffless blood pressure (BP) measuring devices. Baseline BP was determined from the gold-standard ICU arterial catheter. The Vitaliti CVSM was calibrated against the reference arterial catheter. In static (seated in bed) and supine positions, 3 cNIBP measurements, each 30 seconds, were taken for each patient with the Vitaliti CVSM and an invasive arterial catheter. At the conclusion of each test session, captured cNIBP measurements were extracted using MediCollector BEDSIDE data extraction software, and Vitaliti CVSM measurements were extracted to a secure laptop through a cable connection. The errors of these determinations were calculated. Participants were interviewed about device acceptability. RESULTS: The validation analysis included data for 20 patients. The average times from calibration to first measurement in the static position and to first measurement in the supine position were 133.85 seconds (2 minutes 14 seconds) and 535.15 seconds (8 minutes 55 seconds), respectively. The overall mean errors of determination for the static position were –0.621 (SD 4.640) mm Hg for systolic blood pressure (SBP) and 0.457 (SD 1.675) mm Hg for diastolic blood pressure (DBP). Errors of determination were slightly higher for the supine position, at 2.722 (SD 5.207) mm Hg for SBP and 2.650 (SD 3.221) mm Hg for DBP. The majority rated the Vitaliti CVSM as comfortable. This study was limited to evaluation of the device during a very short validation period after calibration (ie, that commenced within 2 minutes after calibration and lasted for a short duration of time). CONCLUSIONS: We found that the Cloud DX’s Vitaliti CVSM demonstrated cNIBP measurement in compliance with ISO 81060-2:2018 standards in the context of evaluation that commenced within 2 minutes of device calibration; this device was also well-received by patients in a postsurgical ICU setting. Future studies will examine the accuracy of the Vitaliti CVSM in ambulatory contexts, with attention to assessment over a longer duration and the impact of excessive patient motion on data artifacts and signal quality. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03493867; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03493867 JMIR Publications 2022-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8922156/ /pubmed/34876396 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/24916 Text en ©Michael H McGillion, Nazari Dvirnik, Stephen Yang, Emilie Belley-Côté, Andre Lamy, Richard Whitlock, Maura Marcucci, Flavia K Borges, Emmanuelle Duceppe, Carley Ouellette, Marissa Bird, Sandra L Carroll, David Conen, Jean-Eric Tarride, Prathiba Harsha, Ted Scott, Amber Good, Krysten Gregus, Karla Sanchez, Pamela Benoit, Julian Owen, Valerie Harvey, Elizabeth Peter, Jeremy Petch, Jessica Vincent, Michelle Graham, P J Devereaux. Originally published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth (https://mhealth.jmir.org), 28.02.2022. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://mhealth.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
McGillion, Michael H
Dvirnik, Nazari
Yang, Stephen
Belley-Côté, Emilie
Lamy, Andre
Whitlock, Richard
Marcucci, Maura
Borges, Flavia K
Duceppe, Emmanuelle
Ouellette, Carley
Bird, Marissa
Carroll, Sandra L
Conen, David
Tarride, Jean-Eric
Harsha, Prathiba
Scott, Ted
Good, Amber
Gregus, Krysten
Sanchez, Karla
Benoit, Pamela
Owen, Julian
Harvey, Valerie
Peter, Elizabeth
Petch, Jeremy
Vincent, Jessica
Graham, Michelle
Devereaux, P J
Continuous Noninvasive Remote Automated Blood Pressure Monitoring With Novel Wearable Technology: A Preliminary Validation Study
title Continuous Noninvasive Remote Automated Blood Pressure Monitoring With Novel Wearable Technology: A Preliminary Validation Study
title_full Continuous Noninvasive Remote Automated Blood Pressure Monitoring With Novel Wearable Technology: A Preliminary Validation Study
title_fullStr Continuous Noninvasive Remote Automated Blood Pressure Monitoring With Novel Wearable Technology: A Preliminary Validation Study
title_full_unstemmed Continuous Noninvasive Remote Automated Blood Pressure Monitoring With Novel Wearable Technology: A Preliminary Validation Study
title_short Continuous Noninvasive Remote Automated Blood Pressure Monitoring With Novel Wearable Technology: A Preliminary Validation Study
title_sort continuous noninvasive remote automated blood pressure monitoring with novel wearable technology: a preliminary validation study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8922156/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34876396
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/24916
work_keys_str_mv AT mcgillionmichaelh continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT dvirniknazari continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT yangstephen continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT belleycoteemilie continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT lamyandre continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT whitlockrichard continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT marcuccimaura continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT borgesflaviak continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT duceppeemmanuelle continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT ouellettecarley continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT birdmarissa continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT carrollsandral continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT conendavid continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT tarridejeaneric continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT harshaprathiba continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT scottted continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT goodamber continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT greguskrysten continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT sanchezkarla continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT benoitpamela continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT owenjulian continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT harveyvalerie continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT peterelizabeth continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT petchjeremy continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT vincentjessica continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT grahammichelle continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy
AT devereauxpj continuousnoninvasiveremoteautomatedbloodpressuremonitoringwithnovelwearabletechnologyapreliminaryvalidationstudy