Sleep Apnea Clinical Trial
Official title:
How Differences in Oximeter Performance May Affect Clinical Decision: A Pragmatic Clinical Trial in Patients Under CPAP or Noninvasive Ventilation
In clinical practice discrepancies between overnight SpO2 recordings performed by 2 devices used simultaneously are regularly observed. However, this has not been systematically studied or quantified. It is therefore important to determine if these discrepancies are anecdotic, or frequent, and to what extent this may affect decisions in clinical practice such as implementing (or withdrawing) oxygen in subjects under noninvasive ventilation (NIV) or continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), or adjusting NIV settings.
Pulse oximetry estimates oxygen saturation in the arterial blood by trans-illuminating a
translucent tissue (usually a fingertip, or an ear lobe) with light-emitting diodes at 2
specific wavelengths. Absorption of light at these different wavelengths (660 nm, red, and
940 nm, infrared respectively) differs between oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin. The
amount of light which is transmitted at both wave lengths is then quantified and processed by
an algorithm that displays a saturation value. The signals are corrected for the pulsatile
nature of arterial oxygen flow. Devices also provide pulse rate measured by plethysmography
(pulse-related changes in volume of fingertip or earlobe). Since its introduction in the
early 1980s, pulse oximetry has proven to be an essential tool for the non-invasive
assessment of blood oxygen saturation (SpO2). The use of pulse oximeter is now widespread and
interests acute care settings as well as primary care settings. Although there have been
recent improvements in signal analysis such as increasing sampling frequency and improving
reflectance technology [4], the accuracy of commercially available oximeters differs. First
of all, there is variability in the way accuracy of pulse oximetry devices is reported within
2% (± 1 SD) or within 5% (± 2 SD) of reference measurements obtained by blood gases analysis
[5]. Secondly, there is a variability between commercially available devices, especially
below a SpO2 of 90%. This is partly explained by the fact that calibration of the different
algorithms employed in signal processing is limited by the range of saturations that can be
safely obtained in healthy volunteers. In respiratory medicine, it has been shown that such
variability of accuracy could affect the diagnosis of Obstructive Sleep Apnea Hypopnea
Syndrome (OSAHS) and impact on clinical decisions as the recorded number of apneas/hypopneas
varied between devices during nocturnal sleep studies [8] Nocturnal hypoxemia (NH) is
considered as one of the major determinants of adverse cardiovascular complications and
neurocognitive impairment in patients suffering of chronic respiratory failure (CRF). Because
of its simplicity, short set-up time and short time response, pulse oximetry is a valuable
screening tool for nocturnal hypoxemia despite its disadvantages such as motion artefacts or
sensitivity to perfusion. Therefore, definitions of NH rely solely on nocturnal oximetry
recording: for instance, in a consensus statement on noninvasive ventilation, spending > 5%
of sleep time under 88% of SpO2 was considered as a relevant threshold. Definitions of NH
remain arbitrary and different expert-based thresholds have been suggested in the medical
literature [10]. Patients suffering from nocturnal hypoventilation, especially those with an
average daytime SpO2 close to the steep portion of the hemoglobin dissociation curve (SpO2
between 90-94%), are at higher risk for NH. Therefore, in these patients, device imprecision
could have a significant impact on medical decisions, such as deciding to adjust ventilator
settings in patients under noninvasive ventilation (NIV) and/or implementing nocturnal oxygen
supplementation.
In patients with CRF and NIV, after optimal adjustment of ventilator settings, prescription
of nocturnal oxygen supplementation is common practice although impact of nocturnal oxygen
supplementation on survival, patient comfort, or prevention of cor pulmonale has yet to be
demonstrated. Practically speaking, it increases considerably the burden of the treatment for
the patient and care givers (additional connections and tubings, noise of the oxygen
concentrator etc.). To our knowledge, no study has evaluated how the use of different pulse
oximeters could impact on this decision. Three types of devices are used in clinical
practice: pulse oximetry using a probe connected to the home ventilator device, pulse
oximetry combined with transcutaneous capnography, or using a "wrist watch" type of device.
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