Stannard Blaine, Levin Matthew A, Lin Hung-Mo, Weiner Menachem M
Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell, Hempstead, NY, USA.
Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
J Clin Monit Comput. 2021 Apr;35(2):413-421. doi: 10.1007/s10877-020-00487-x. Epub 2020 Feb 21.
Darker skin pigmentation appears to cause underestimation of regional oxygen saturation (rSO) for certain cerebral oximetry devices. This presents a risk of triggering unindicated interventions and may limit its utility for predicting adverse outcomes. Our goal was to quantify the impact of self-reported race on oximetry measurements during cardiac surgery and elucidate whether race has a mediating role in the association of rSO with mortality. Data was extracted from our department's data warehouse for adult patients who underwent on-pump cardiac surgery between June 2014 and June 2018. Intraoperative rSO was recorded every 15 s throughout all cases. After grouping patients by self-reported race, multiple linear regression modeling was utilized to assess the association between race and mean pre-bypass rSO while controlling for various perioperative variables. The role of mean pre-bypass rSO for predicting 30-day mortality was evaluated via multiple logistic regression, and the threshold for rSO was selected by maximizing F1 score. There were 4267 patients included. Compared to Caucasian patients, the unadjusted difference in mean pre-bypass rSO was - 0.6% (95% CI - 1.3 to 0.04) for African American patients, - 1.8% (- 2.7 to - 0.9) for Asian patients, 0.1% (- 0.8 to 1.0) for Hispanic patients, - 1.6% (- 3.0 to - 0.4) for Indian/South Asian patients, and - 1.4% (- 3.7 to 0.9) for Pacific Islander patients. After adjusting for perioperative variables, differences in rSO readings less than 2% were observed between racial groups. Mean pre-bypass rSO under 63% was an independent predictor of higher 30-day mortality risk (OR: 2.86, CI 1.39 to 5.53, p = 0.003), and the interaction variable between rSO and race was not statistically significant (p = 0.299). Cerebral oximetry measurements are more consistent across racial groups than previously reported, supporting its utility for intraoperative monitoring and risk stratification. Pre-intervention rSO is associated with increased 30-day mortality at a higher threshold than previously reported and was not significantly impacted by self-reported race.
对于某些脑氧饱和度监测设备而言,较深的皮肤色素沉着似乎会导致局部氧饱和度(rSO)被低估。这存在引发不必要干预措施的风险,并且可能会限制其在预测不良结局方面的效用。我们的目标是量化自我报告的种族对心脏手术期间氧饱和度测量的影响,并阐明种族在rSO与死亡率的关联中是否具有中介作用。数据从我们科室的数据仓库中提取,纳入2014年6月至2018年6月期间接受体外循环心脏手术的成年患者。在所有病例中,每隔15秒记录一次术中rSO。在根据自我报告的种族对患者进行分组后,采用多元线性回归模型评估种族与体外循环前平均rSO之间的关联,同时控制各种围手术期变量。通过多元逻辑回归评估体外循环前平均rSO对预测30天死亡率的作用,并通过最大化F1分数来选择rSO的阈值。共纳入4267例患者。与白人患者相比,非裔美国患者体外循环前平均rSO的未调整差异为 -0.6%(95%CI -1.3至0.04),亚洲患者为 -1.8%(-2.7至 -0.9),西班牙裔患者为0.1%(-0.8至1.0),印度/南亚患者为 -1.6%(-3.0至 -0.4),太平洋岛民患者为 -1.4%(-3.7至0.9)。在调整围手术期变量后,种族组之间rSO读数的差异小于2%。体外循环前平均rSO低于63%是30天死亡率较高风险的独立预测因素(OR:2.86,CI 1.39至5.53,p = 0.003),并且rSO与种族之间的交互变量无统计学意义(p = 0.299)。脑氧饱和度测量在不同种族组之间比先前报道的更为一致,这支持了其在术中监测和风险分层中的效用。干预前rSO与30天死亡率增加相关,其阈值高于先前报道,且未受到自我报告种族的显著影响。