Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03039881

Evaluation of Non-Invasive Respiratory Volume Monitor

Blinded Observational Study to Evaluate a Non-Invasive Respiratory Volume Monitor in the Post-Anesthesia Care Unit and on the General Hospital Floor

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
150 (actual)
Sponsor
Tufts Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This observational study investigates the validity and utility of a new, non-significant risk, FDA approved respiratory monitor, ExSpiron, in the perioperative course of patients undergoing elective surgery under general anesthesia. The study patients will be monitored before, during and after surgery, in post-anaesthesia care unit (PACU) and recovery room for the first post-operative night. The physiologic data will not be used or influence the standard of care for subjects. It is anticipated that this monitor may be able to improve perioperative care in the future.

Detailed description

Aim and Hypotheses Currently, there is no objective measure of early respiratory indicators for developing respiratory compromise in surgical patients. Current respiratory assessment in non-intubated patients relies on oximetry data and subjective clinical assessment. Pulse oximetry has been extremely helpful in recognizing oxygen desaturations but it is a late indicator of respiratory decline. New advances in technology and digital signal processing have led to the development of an impedance based Respiratory Volume Monitor (RVM). The RVM (ExSpiron™, Respiratory Motion, Inc.; Waltham, MA) has been shown to provide accurate real-time, continuous, non-invasive measurements of tidal volume (TV), minute ventilation (MV) and respiratory rate (RR) in general patient population. Hypotheses Primary: Low minute ventilation (LMV) defined as sustained LMV\<40% minute ventilation predicted (MVPRED) based on IBW following opioid administration correlates with adverse clinical outcomes in PACU or on the floor including: * O2 desaturation, atelectasis, respiratory status requiring advanced monitoring * respiratory interventions such as O2 administration, continuous positive airway pressure CPAP, BiPAP, * incidence of ICU transfer and/or increase in PACU and/or general hospital floor (GHF) length of stay (LOS). Secondary: * 1\. Decreased MV defined as sustained MV\<80% MVPRED based on IBW before opioid administration correlates with adverse clinical outcomes as defined above. * 2\. Patients with decreased MV prior to opioid administration will be more likely to develop LMV after standard opioid administration compared to patients with normal MV defined as MV ≥ 81% MVPRED based on ideal body weight (IBW) Rationale Continuous respiratory monitoring using the ExSpiron System will be particularly beneficial to patients in the post-anesthesia environment. Assessment and management of respiratory function and early intervention when indicated is a multifaceted, complex task often complicated by the lack of a cohesive and continuous monitoring system to guide clinical decisions. The ExSpiron system is designed for these patients and is intended to address some of the limitations of the current generation of hospital monitors and to provide healthcare providers with continuous real-time data regarding the patient's respiratory status. Recent data has shown that stratification of patients based on the RVM's MV as % of predicted MV (MVPRED), prior to opioid dosing has made it possible to identify patients who are at risk for further decreases in MV and opioid-induced respiratory depression (OIRD). 1. In the spontaneously breathing, non-ventilated patient, current monitoring devices do not provide continuous, objective non-invasive, continuous real time information of the important respiratory parameters TV, MV \& RR. 2. Current monitoring of non-intubated patients mostly relies on subjective clinical assessment, oximetry data, and rarely end-tidal carbon dioxide CO2 measurements. In appropriate clinical settings, the ExSpiron system can provide direct quantitative measure of ventilation parameters for use in clinical assessment and trend prediction as well as response to medications and other interventions to allow for more efficient clinical decision making. 3. Current technologies do not provide for a continuity of care between the PACU and the general hospital floor.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICENon-Invasive Respiratory Volume MonitorThe device requires the application of a monitoring PadSets to the patient's skin similar to EKG electrodes and, as such, poses minimal risk.

Timeline

Start date
2015-01-09
Primary completion
2019-01-08
Completion
2019-01-08
First posted
2017-02-01
Last updated
2019-01-09

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03039881. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.