Respiratory Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Vital Sign Monitoring With Continuous Pulse Oximetry and Wireless Clinician Notification After Surgery
Patients are at risk of respiratory depression after having surgery. The medications that patients are treated with to control their pain can impair their breathing and this can progress to respiratory and cardiac arrest and even death. Vital signs assessment on surgical wards is usually done every 4 hours and this may be insufficient to identify and manage many cases of respiratory depression. The aim of this study is to determine the impact on safety and nursing workflow of a respiratory monitoring on two surgical wards by measuring safety outcomes. Respiratory depression is a serious complication of pain treatment that can lead to patient complications and death. The level of monitoring available in hospitals by nursing staff is insufficient to manage this problem. If this new monitoring technology works as designed then patient safety can be improved while maintaining effective pain therapy.
Patients are at risk for respiratory depression in the perioperative period. The opioids used
in both patient controlled analgesia (PCA) and epidural analgesia can cause respiratory
depression. The progression of opioid side effects usually starts with sedation, respiratory
depression follows and, if left uncorrected, this can lead to respiratory and then cardiac
arrest and death. Sedation is a common side-effect, occurring in about 13% of patients and
the incidence of respiratory depression varies depending on the precise definition used and
the analgesia modality, but it has been reported to occur in about 1% of cases. If you
continuously monitor patients with oximetry and capnography the incidence of respiratory
depression has been shown to be much higher, as high as 12%8. The incidence of cardiac arrest
and death from opioid overdose has been estimated at about 2 cases per 10, 0009. Given that
the number of patients undergoing surgery annually is about 100 million worldwide,
respiratory depression occurs between 1 and 12 million times and it results in about 20, 000
preventable deaths each year10. The troublesome aspect of this complication is that it often
occurs in healthy patients where the family and clinical staff do not anticipate a bad
outcome.
The problem of unexpected respiratory depression amongst patients treated with opioids is
compounded by the challenge of dealing with obstructive sleep apnea patients in the
perioperative period. Obstructive sleep apnea, characterized by the complete or partial
obstruction of the upper airway during sleep, is not rare, with about 25% of the general
population (and a greater proportion of the surgical population) being at risk for this
condition. These patients are at even greater risk of perioperative respiratory events and
consequently the guidelines from the American Society of Anesthesiology recommend continuous
monitoring of these patients13,14. These guidelines are expert-based as no clinical trials
have established the efficacy of continuous monitoring in this population.
These two problems (respiratory depression from opioids and obstructive sleep apnea) have
caused significant logistic problems in hospitals as many institutions do not have the
equipment to provide continuous monitoring of patients outside of the intensive care units
and there is limited capacity in the critical care areas to monitor all the patients at risk.
The impact of respiratory depression can be mitigated if it is recognized early enough and
appropriate actions are taken to resuscitate the patient. Early recognition of this
complication depends on frequent and regular vital sign assessments by nursing staff.
he problem in many surgical wards is that nursing staff, particularly at night, are spread
thin and patients can occasionally go several hours without being seen. In this a period a
patient can spiral into trouble from sedation to respiratory depression and eventually into
respiratory and cardiac arrest. Previously, cardiac monitoring with telemetry has been
available and could be used for patients in the perioperative period. Although telemetry has
been proven useful for some groups of patients (including those with an automated
defibrillator that has fired, those with a prolonged QT interval and those with acute heart
failure) this technology will only pick up cases of respiratory depression that progress into
a cardiac event15.
Recently technology has become commercially available to continuously monitor pulse oximetry
and notify clinical staff wirelessly via a paging system. The advantage of such a system is
that clinicians can be notified immediately when a patient begins to decompensate from
respiratory depression within enough time to initiate resuscitation before the patient
progresses to respiratory or cardiac arrest. Another benefit of these systems is that
patients at risk can be monitored on regular surgical wards without utilizing additional
nursing staff. A recent literature search (of MEDLINE) that searched the concepts of
respiratory monitoring in the perioperative period (using the MESH keywords: monitoring,
oximetry, postoperative period and clinical trial) was conducted to see if there was evidence
to support the use of these systems. Only a single study was identified in the search that
specifically investigated the postoperative period, a before-after study on a 36-bed
orthopedic ward found that a respiratory monitoring system was effective in reducing the need
for rescue resuscitations and ICU transfers16. Although there is a Cochrane review on pulse
oximetry for perioperative monitoring, this study focused only on intraoperative and recovery
room monitoring and did not address monitoring of patients while on surgical wards17.
Given these promising results, a respiratory monitoring will be trialed on two surgical wards
at the Juravinski Hospital in Hamilton, Ontario. In order to evaluate the impact of this
technology the investigators designed a randomized controlled trial to determine if routine
wireless respiratory monitoring for 72 hours of surgical patients on two surgical wards (that
care for general surgery, urology and gynecology-oncology patients) reduces the need for
rescue resuscitations - Naloxone resuscitation of opioid overdose, Code Blues
(Cardio-respiratory arrests) and Intensive Care Unit (ICU) transfers. In addition, this study
will also evaluate the risk factors for respiratory depression, the types and duration of
respiratory alarms that occur and the impact on nursing workflow.
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