Hemoglobin Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of Accuracy and Clinical Outcomes of a Continuous Noninvasive Hemoglobin Monitor in the Emergency Room Setting
The study is a clinical trial to determine whether more efficient medical and operational outcomes can be achieved with using the new SpHb monitoring during triage in the emergency room setting. The investigators also evaluate the accuracy of the measurements of the SpHb device by Maximo versus the gold standard of central hospital laboratory value. In addition, the investigators will assess patient satisfaction with the tool.
A major issue faced by emergency departments all over the world is overcrowding, resulting
from limited resources (i.e. staff, space, equipment) attending to a large of patients that
exceeds the physical and/or staffing capacity of the ED. To manage the issue of overcrowding,
the system of triage was created to help prioritize each patient's case, based on set
criteria to determine time to treatment and/or which treatment is indicated. Our study will
contribute to the discovery of more efficient ways of triaging patients based on objective
and subjective criteria for decision-making about treatment and disposition, while
simultaneously maintaining patient safety.
The investigators achieve this aim by evaluating the efficiency of a noninvasive and
continuous total hemoglobin (SpHb) monitor provided by Masimo Corporation (Irvine USA).
Standard hemoglobin measurements via central laboratory testing are invasive, painful,
time-consuming, have increased lag time for analysis, potentially expose health care workers
to blood-borne illness, and delay treatment onset because they require direct blood sampling.
The new SpHb monitor potentially offers a new way to evaluate objective criteria about
patients to maximize treatment outcomes and appropriate dispositions. The SpHb monitor has
the potential to trend hemoglobin monitoring, quicken the detection of acute anemia, and
avoid the complications, anxiety, expense, and patient discomfort associated with invasive
blood draws.
In the ED setting, there is a need to efficiently triage a patient and designate a
disposition for appropriate treatment management and outcomes. Hemoglobin level is an
accurate indicator that helps distinguish patients who need early blood transfusion and meet
criteria for admission. Noninvasive technology, such as the SpHb device by Masimo, will
assist with common goals in emergency medicine: to efficiently and accurately decrease wait
times to treatment and disposition, screening patients who have difficult venous access,
providing repeated sampling without causing iatrogenic blood loss linked to anemia, and
offering an approach that may be used to develop an organized coherent therapeutic plan based
on physiologic criteria for the emergency patient as he/she proceeds from the ED to the OR,
the hospital general floor, and the ICU.
This study will be performed at the University of Chicago Medical Center in the main adult
emergency room. Patients will be examined and enrolled into our study initially by the triage
nurse after each person has given his/her written informed consent.
Randomization process will be carried out based on days of the week. Patients will be
enrolled in one group every two days. For example, starting on the week when we begin the
trial, we will assign Monday patients to the control group, Tuesday patients to the
experimental group, Wednesday patients to the control group… Two groups are similar in
characteristics. Depending on whether the subject has been randomized into the control or
experimental group, we will not use or use the SpHb monitor to obtain measurements. To obtain
measurements, we place the probe of the device on the patient's finger and record the
hemoglobin level determined by the Masimo Radical-7 Pulse CO-Oximeter.
We will collect patient satisfaction data 2 minutes after the placement of the SpHb device
and 2 minutes after the blood sampling. The collection of blood is considered standard of
care. Along with recording hemoglobin measurements, we will record triage chief complaint,
final physician diagnosis, time to blood products transfusion, time to disposition (i.e.
discharge home or Hospital admission via intensive care unit or general floor), time to
procedure (i.e. procedure via operating room, endoscopy with interventional gastroenterology,
interventional pulmonology, or ENT, or interventional radiology), and hemodynamics (i.e.
blood pressure, heart rate, oxygen saturation, and respiratory rate).
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