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Predictors of the accuracy of pulse-contour cardiac index and suggestion of a calibration-index: a prospective evaluation and validation study

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Title
Predictors of the accuracy of pulse-contour cardiac index and suggestion of a calibration-index: a prospective evaluation and validation study
Published in
BMC Anesthesiology, April 2015
DOI 10.1186/s12871-015-0024-x
Pubmed ID
Authors

Wolfgang Huber, Jonas Koenig, Sebastian Mair, Tibor Schuster, Bernd Saugel, Florian Eyer, Veit Phillip, Caroline Schultheiss, Philipp Thies, Ulrich Mayr, Henrik Einwächter, Matthias Treiber, Josef Hoellthaler, Roland M Schmid

Abstract

Cardiac Index (CI) is a key-parameter of hemodynamic monitoring. Indicator-dilution is considered as gold standard and can be obtained by pulmonary arterial catheter or transpulmonary thermodilution (TPTD; CItd). Furthermore, CI can be estimated by Pulse-Contour-Analysis (PCA) using arterial wave-form analysis (CIpc). Obviously, adjustment of CIpc to CItd initially improves the accuracy of CIpc. Despite uncertainty after which time accuracy of CIpc might be inappropriate, recalibration by TPTD is suggested after a maximum of 8 h. We hypothesized that accuracy of CIpc might not only depend on time to last TPTD, but also on changes of the arterial wave curve detectable by PCA itself. Therefore, we tried to prospectively characterize predictors of accuracy and precision of CIpc (primary outcome). In addition to "time to last TPTD" we evaluated potential predictors detectable solely by pulse-contour-analysis. Finally, the study aimed to develop a pulse-contour-derived "calibration-index" suggesting recalibration and to validate these results in an independent collective. In 28 intensive-care-patients with PiCCO-monitoring (Pulsion Medical-Systems, Germany) 56 datasets were recorded. CIpc-values at baseline and after intervals of 1 h, 2 h, 4 h, 6 h and 8 h were compared to CItd derived from immediately subsequent TPTD. Results from this evaluation-collective were validated in an independent validation-collective (49 patients, 67 datasets). Mean bias values CItd-CIpc after different intervals ranged between -0.248 and 0.112 L/min/m(2). Percentage-error after different intervals to last TPTD ranged between 18.6% (evaluation, 2 h-interval) and 40.3% (validation, 6 h-interval). In the merged data, percentage-error was below 30% after 1 h, 2 h, 4 h and 8 h, and exceeded 30% only after 6 h. "Time to last calibration" was neither associated to accuracy nor to precision of CIpc in any uni- or multivariate analysis. By contrast, the height of CIpc and particularly changes in CIpc compared to last thermodilution-derived CItd(base) univariately and independently predicted the bias CItd-CIpc in both collectives. Relative changes of CIpc compared to CItd(base) exceeding thresholds derived from the evaluation-collective (-11.6% < CIpc-CItd(base)/CItd(base) < 7.4%) were confirmed as significant predictors of a bias |CItd-CIpc| ≥ 20% in the validation-collective. Recalibration triggered by changes of CIpc compared to CItd(base) derived from last calibration should be preferred to fixed intervals.

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The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 15 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Unknown 15 100%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Researcher 5 33%
Other 2 13%
Student > Ph. D. Student 1 7%
Student > Doctoral Student 1 7%
Student > Master 1 7%
Other 1 7%
Unknown 4 27%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Medicine and Dentistry 9 60%
Sports and Recreations 1 7%
Unknown 5 33%