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Assessment of Apple Watch Series 6 pulse oximetry and electrocardiograms in a pediatric population

BACKGROUND: Recent technologic advances have resulted in increased development and utilization of direct-to-consumer cardiac wearable devices with various functionality. This study aimed to assess Apple Watch Series 6 (AW6) pulse oximetry and electrocardiography (ECG) in a cohort of pediatric patien...

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Autores principales: Littell, Lauren, Roelle, Lisa, Dalal, Aarti, Van Hare, George F., Orr, William B., Miller, Nathan, Avari Silva, Jennifer N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9931318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36812630
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000051
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author Littell, Lauren
Roelle, Lisa
Dalal, Aarti
Van Hare, George F.
Orr, William B.
Miller, Nathan
Avari Silva, Jennifer N.
author_facet Littell, Lauren
Roelle, Lisa
Dalal, Aarti
Van Hare, George F.
Orr, William B.
Miller, Nathan
Avari Silva, Jennifer N.
author_sort Littell, Lauren
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Recent technologic advances have resulted in increased development and utilization of direct-to-consumer cardiac wearable devices with various functionality. This study aimed to assess Apple Watch Series 6 (AW6) pulse oximetry and electrocardiography (ECG) in a cohort of pediatric patients. METHODS: This single-center, prospective study enrolled pediatric patients ≥ 3kg and having an ECG and/or pulse oximetry (SpO2) as part of their planned evaluation. Exclusion criteria: 1) non-English speaking patients and 2) patients in state custody. Simultaneous tracings were obtained for SpO2 and ECG with concurrent standard pulse oximeter and 12-lead ECG. AW6 automated rhythm interpretations were compared to physician over-read and categorized as accurate, accurate with missed findings, inconclusive (automated interpretation: “inconclusive”), or inaccurate. RESULTS: A total of 84 patients were enrolled over a 5-week period. 68 patients (81%) were placed into the SpO2 and ECG arm, with 16 patients (19%) placed into the SpO2 only arm. Pulse oximetry data was successfully collected in 71/84 (85%) patients and ECG data in 61/68 (90%). ΔSpO2 between modalities was 2.0±2.6% (r = 0.76). ΔRR was 43±44msec (r = 0.96), ΔPR 19±23msec (r = 0.79), ΔQRS 12±13msec (r = 0.78), and ΔQT 20±19msec (r = 0.9). The AW6 automated rhythm analysis yielded a 75% specificity and found: 1) 40/61 (65.6%) “accurate”, 2) 6/61 (9.8%) “accurate with missed findings”, 3) 14/61 (23%) “inconclusive”, and 4) 1/61 (1.6%) incorrect. CONCLUSION: The AW6 can accurately measure oxygen saturation when compared to hospital pulse oximeters in pediatric patients and provide good quality single lead ECGs that allow for accurate measurement of RR, PR, QRS, and QT intervals with manual interpretation. The AW6-automated rhythm interpretation algorithm has limitations for smaller pediatric patients and patients with abnormal ECGs.
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spelling pubmed-99313182023-02-16 Assessment of Apple Watch Series 6 pulse oximetry and electrocardiograms in a pediatric population Littell, Lauren Roelle, Lisa Dalal, Aarti Van Hare, George F. Orr, William B. Miller, Nathan Avari Silva, Jennifer N. PLOS Digit Health Research Article BACKGROUND: Recent technologic advances have resulted in increased development and utilization of direct-to-consumer cardiac wearable devices with various functionality. This study aimed to assess Apple Watch Series 6 (AW6) pulse oximetry and electrocardiography (ECG) in a cohort of pediatric patients. METHODS: This single-center, prospective study enrolled pediatric patients ≥ 3kg and having an ECG and/or pulse oximetry (SpO2) as part of their planned evaluation. Exclusion criteria: 1) non-English speaking patients and 2) patients in state custody. Simultaneous tracings were obtained for SpO2 and ECG with concurrent standard pulse oximeter and 12-lead ECG. AW6 automated rhythm interpretations were compared to physician over-read and categorized as accurate, accurate with missed findings, inconclusive (automated interpretation: “inconclusive”), or inaccurate. RESULTS: A total of 84 patients were enrolled over a 5-week period. 68 patients (81%) were placed into the SpO2 and ECG arm, with 16 patients (19%) placed into the SpO2 only arm. Pulse oximetry data was successfully collected in 71/84 (85%) patients and ECG data in 61/68 (90%). ΔSpO2 between modalities was 2.0±2.6% (r = 0.76). ΔRR was 43±44msec (r = 0.96), ΔPR 19±23msec (r = 0.79), ΔQRS 12±13msec (r = 0.78), and ΔQT 20±19msec (r = 0.9). The AW6 automated rhythm analysis yielded a 75% specificity and found: 1) 40/61 (65.6%) “accurate”, 2) 6/61 (9.8%) “accurate with missed findings”, 3) 14/61 (23%) “inconclusive”, and 4) 1/61 (1.6%) incorrect. CONCLUSION: The AW6 can accurately measure oxygen saturation when compared to hospital pulse oximeters in pediatric patients and provide good quality single lead ECGs that allow for accurate measurement of RR, PR, QRS, and QT intervals with manual interpretation. The AW6-automated rhythm interpretation algorithm has limitations for smaller pediatric patients and patients with abnormal ECGs. Public Library of Science 2022-08-22 /pmc/articles/PMC9931318/ /pubmed/36812630 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000051 Text en © 2022 Littell et al 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 author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Littell, Lauren
Roelle, Lisa
Dalal, Aarti
Van Hare, George F.
Orr, William B.
Miller, Nathan
Avari Silva, Jennifer N.
Assessment of Apple Watch Series 6 pulse oximetry and electrocardiograms in a pediatric population
title Assessment of Apple Watch Series 6 pulse oximetry and electrocardiograms in a pediatric population
title_full Assessment of Apple Watch Series 6 pulse oximetry and electrocardiograms in a pediatric population
title_fullStr Assessment of Apple Watch Series 6 pulse oximetry and electrocardiograms in a pediatric population
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Apple Watch Series 6 pulse oximetry and electrocardiograms in a pediatric population
title_short Assessment of Apple Watch Series 6 pulse oximetry and electrocardiograms in a pediatric population
title_sort assessment of apple watch series 6 pulse oximetry and electrocardiograms in a pediatric population
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9931318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36812630
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000051
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