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RecruitingNCT06822439

Remote Fetal Monitoring in High Risk Pregnancies

Investigating the Acceptability and Feasibility of Remote Fetal Monitoring in a High Risk Obstetric Population

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
50 (estimated)
Sponsor
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Antenatal nonstress tests (NSTs) are performed to assess fetal health and are used as a cost-effective test that can be widely administered. However, an NST is operator-dependent due to the nature of Doppler ultrasound and is primarily performed in a clinic and hospital setting. The ability to conduct a clinically valuable test at home would address access to care issues faced by numerous women in the United States and reduce the workload on healthcare clinicians facing a shortage of human resources. This pilot study aims to assess the feasibility and acceptability of home NST monitoring in order to determine whether femomTM could be utilized as an adjunct to routine prenatal care. Patients with high risk pregnancies who are recommended to undergo at least once weekly at 32 weeks testing by the obstetrician will be recruited for participation in this study. Participants will be asked to perform three 30 minute monitoring sessions weekly starting at 32 weeks for 6 weeks.

Detailed description

Measuring fetal heart rate (FHR) through various methods is essential for assessing fetal wellbeing antenatally. This enables clinicians to identify patterns that could indicate fetal hypoxia. Cardiotocography (CTG), which uses Doppler ultrasound, is the gold standard for non-invasive FHR monitoring. This technology detects movement in the cardiac structures and approximates the FHR from this and requires signal modulation and auto-correlation to provide accurate quality readings of FHR. This method of external FHR monitoring is prone to signal loss, maternal fetal ambiguity where the maternal heart rate is confused for FHR, and signal artefacts (e.g., double-counting, and half-counting), during both antenatal and intrapartum monitoring, and must be performed by an obstetric provider. Non-invasive fetal electrocardiography (NIFECG) is a form of electrocardiography (ECG), which captures simultaneous maternal and fetal PQRST waves. NIFECG has the theoretical benefits of minimizing maternal-fetal heart activity confusion, is not affected by maternal adiposity, and delivers no energy to the patient, which permits prolonged periods of fetal monitoring with safety. To date, NIFECG has mostly been limited to research use due to low fetal signal-to-noise ratios. Despite technical challenges, NIFECG may be the most promising method of ambulatory self-applied FHR monitoring.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEFetal ECG monitoringPatients will wear a fetal ECG monitor which they will place on their abdomen

Timeline

Start date
2025-05-01
Primary completion
2026-12-01
Completion
2027-01-01
First posted
2025-02-12
Last updated
2026-03-09

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06822439. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.