From the Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care, and Pain Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Anesth Analg. 2019 Sep;129(3):726-734. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000003948.
The convergence of multiple recent developments in health care information technology and monitoring devices has made possible the creation of remote patient surveillance systems that increase the timeliness and quality of patient care. More convenient, less invasive monitoring devices, including patches, wearables, and biosensors, now allow for continuous physiological data to be gleaned from patients in a variety of care settings across the perioperative experience. These data can be bound into a single data repository, creating so-called data lakes. The high volume and diversity of data in these repositories must be processed into standard formats that can be queried in real time. These data can then be used by sophisticated prediction algorithms currently under development, enabling the early recognition of patterns of clinical deterioration otherwise undetectable to humans. Improved predictions can reduce alarm fatigue. In addition, data are now automatically queriable on a real-time basis such that they can be fed back to clinicians in a time frame that allows for meaningful intervention. These advancements are key components of successful remote surveillance systems. Anesthesiologists have the opportunity to be at the forefront of remote surveillance in the care they provide in the operating room, postanesthesia care unit, and intensive care unit, while also expanding their scope to include high-risk preoperative and postoperative patients on the general care wards. These systems hold the promise of enabling anesthesiologists to detect and intervene upon changes in the clinical status of the patient before adverse events have occurred. Importantly, however, significant barriers still exist to the effective deployment of these technologies and their study in impacting patient outcomes. Studies demonstrating the impact of remote surveillance on patient outcomes are limited. Critical to the impact of the technology are strategies of implementation, including who should receive and respond to alerts and how they should respond. Moreover, the lack of cost-effectiveness data and the uncertainty of whether clinical activities surrounding these technologies will be financially reimbursed remain significant challenges to future scale and sustainability. This narrative review will discuss the evolving technical components of remote surveillance systems, the clinical use cases relevant to the anesthesiologist's practice, the existing evidence for their impact on patients, the barriers that exist to their effective implementation and study, and important considerations regarding sustainability and cost-effectiveness.
医疗保健信息技术和监测设备的多个最新发展的融合使得创建远程患者监测系统成为可能,从而提高了患者护理的及时性和质量。更方便、侵入性更小的监测设备,包括贴片、可穿戴设备和生物传感器,现在可以从各种围手术期护理环境中的患者身上连续收集生理数据。这些数据可以绑定到单个数据存储库中,创建所谓的数据湖。这些存储库中的数据量巨大且多样化,必须处理成可以实时查询的标准格式。然后,可以使用当前正在开发的复杂预测算法来处理这些数据,从而能够早期识别出人类无法察觉的临床恶化模式。改进的预测可以减少警报疲劳。此外,现在可以实时自动查询数据,以便可以在允许进行有意义干预的时间范围内将其反馈给临床医生。这些进步是成功的远程监测系统的关键组成部分。麻醉师有机会在他们提供的手术室、麻醉后护理单元和重症监护病房护理中处于远程监测的前沿,同时还将他们的范围扩大到包括普通病房中高危的术前和术后患者。这些系统有望使麻醉师能够在发生不良事件之前检测和干预患者临床状况的变化。然而,重要的是,这些技术的有效部署及其对患者结果的影响仍然存在重大障碍。证明远程监测对患者结果有影响的研究有限。对技术的影响至关重要的是实施策略,包括谁应该接收和响应警报以及如何响应。此外,缺乏成本效益数据以及围绕这些技术的临床活动是否会得到经济补偿仍然是未来规模和可持续性的重大挑战。本叙述性综述将讨论远程监测系统的不断发展的技术组成部分、与麻醉师实践相关的临床用例、它们对患者影响的现有证据、其有效实施和研究存在的障碍,以及关于可持续性和成本效益的重要考虑因素。