Department of Anesthesiology, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA.
Anesth Analg. 2012 Oct;115(4):929-33. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0b013e31825c7f0c. Epub 2012 Jun 13.
Hypoxemia (oxygen saturation <90%) lasting 2 or more minutes occurs in 6.8% of adult patients undergoing noncardiac anesthesia in operating room settings. Alarm management functionality can be added to decision support systems (DSS) to send text alerts about vital signs outside specified thresholds, using data in anesthesia information management systems. We considered enhancing our DSS to send hypoxemia alerts to the text pagers of supervising anesthesiologists. As part of a voluntary application for an investigative device exemption from our IRB to implement such functionality, we evaluated the maximum potential utility of such an alert system.
Pulse oximetry values (Spo(2)) were extracted from our anesthesia information management systems for all cases performed in our main operating rooms and ambulatory surgical center between September 1, 2011, and February 4, 2012 (n = 16,870). Hypoxemic episodes (Spo(2) < 90%) were characterized as either (a) lasting one or more minutes or (b) lasting 2 or more minutes. A single simulated "alert" was modeled as having been sent at the timestamp of the first (a) or the second (b) hypoxemic value. The hypoxemic episode was considered resolved at 1, 3, or 5 minutes after the time of the alert if the Spo(2) value was no longer below the 90% threshold. Two-sided 99% conservative confidence limits were calculated for the percentage of unresolved alerts at the 3 evaluation intervals and compared with 70%, the lower limit of an acceptable true alarm rate for clinical utility.
There was at least 1 hypoxemic episode lasting 1 minute or longer in 23% of cases, and at least 1 episode lasting 2 minutes or longer in 8% of cases. Only 7% (99% confidence interval [CI] 6% to 8%) of the 1-minute hypoxemic episodes were unresolved after 3 minutes, and only 8% (99% CI 6%to 9%) of 2-minute episodes after 5 minutes (both P < 10(-6) in comparison with 70% minimum reliability rate).
Low utility should be expected for a DSS sending hypoxemia alerts to supervising anesthesiologists, because nearly all hypoxemic episodes will have been resolved before arrival of the anesthesiologist in the operating room. These results suggest that the principal research focus should be on developing more sophisticated alerts and processes within rooms for the anesthesia care provider to initiate treatment promptly, to interpret or correct artifacts, and to make it easier to call for assistance via a rapid communication system.
在手术室环境中接受非心脏麻醉的成年患者中,有 6.8%会出现持续 2 分钟或更长时间的低氧血症(氧饱和度 <90%)。决策支持系统(DSS)可以添加报警管理功能,使用麻醉信息管理系统中的数据发送关于生命体征超出特定阈值的文本警报。我们考虑增强我们的 DSS,以便向监管麻醉师的寻呼机发送低氧血症警报。作为我们 IRB 为实施此类功能发出的调查设备豁免自愿申请的一部分,我们评估了此类警报系统的最大潜在效用。
从我们的麻醉信息管理系统中提取了 2011 年 9 月 1 日至 2012 年 2 月 4 日期间在我们的主要手术室和日间手术中心进行的所有病例的脉搏血氧饱和度值(Spo(2))。低氧血症发作(Spo(2) < 90%)的特征是(a)持续 1 分钟或更长时间或(b)持续 2 分钟或更长时间。模拟的单个“警报”被建模为在第一次(a)或第二次(b)低氧值时发出。如果 Spo(2)值不再低于 90%阈值,则在警报发出后 1、3 或 5 分钟,将认为低氧血症发作已解决。在 3 个评估间隔内,对未解决警报的百分比计算了双侧 99%保守置信限,并与临床实用性可接受的真实警报率下限 70%进行了比较。
在 23%的病例中至少有 1 次持续 1 分钟或更长时间的低氧血症发作,在 8%的病例中至少有 1 次持续 2 分钟或更长时间的低氧血症发作。仅 7%(99%CI 6%至 8%)的 1 分钟低氧血症发作在 3 分钟后未解决,而仅 8%(99%CI 6%至 9%)的 2 分钟发作在 5 分钟后未解决(均 P < 10(-6)与 70%的最低可靠性率相比)。
向监管麻醉师发送低氧血症警报的 DSS 的预期效用较低,因为在麻醉师到达手术室之前,几乎所有的低氧血症发作都将得到解决。这些结果表明,主要的研究重点应该是开发更复杂的警报和处理程序,以便麻醉护理提供者能够在房间内迅速启动治疗、解释或纠正伪影,并通过快速通信系统更容易地寻求帮助。