| Literature DB >> 28158489 |
James E Sharman1, Alberto P Avolio2, Johannes Baulmann3, Athanase Benetos4, Jacques Blacher5, C Leigh Blizzard1, Pierre Boutouyrie6, Chen-Huan Chen7, Phil Chowienczyk8, John R Cockcroft9, J Kennedy Cruickshank10, Isabel Ferreira11, Lorenzo Ghiadoni12, Alun Hughes13, Piotr Jankowski14, Stephane Laurent6, Barry J McDonnell9, Carmel McEniery15, Sandrine C Millasseau16, Theodoros G Papaioannou17, Gianfranco Parati18,19, Jeong Bae Park20, Athanase D Protogerou21, Mary J Roman22, Giuseppe Schillaci23, Patrick Segers24, George S Stergiou25, Hirofumi Tomiyama26, Raymond R Townsend27, Luc M Van Bortel28, Jiguang Wang29, Siegfried Wassertheurer30, Thomas Weber31, Ian B Wilkinson15, Charalambos Vlachopoulos32.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28158489 PMCID: PMC5837446 DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehw632
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Heart J ISSN: 0195-668X Impact factor: 29.983
Glossary of terms
| Intra-arterial (invasive) blood pressure | Direct measurement of blood pressure within the artery using an in-dwelling catheter-based pressure transducer |
| Peripheral (non-invasive) blood pressure | Blood pressure at a site distal from the aorta. This most often refers to brachial or radial artery blood pressure, but for the purpose of this paper also includes carotid blood pressure even though local derivation is regarded as a surrogate of central blood pressure |
| Central (aortic) blood pressure | Blood pressure in the proximal ascending aorta |
| Systolic blood pressure amplification | The increase in systolic blood pressure from proximal to peripheral arterial vessels (e.g. aorta-to-brachial, or brachial-to-radial arteries) |
| Transfer function | Signal processing step to estimate central blood pressure waveforms from peripherally recorded waveforms |
| Calibration | Process of scaling a waveform using units of pressure |
Summary of issues in the assessment and reporting of central blood pressure (BP) monitors and recommendations
| Issue | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| 1. Disparity of non-invasive central BP devices as to what is being measured | Device manufacturers should clearly state the purported measurement function of their device. These can be broadly categorized into two types based on function: Type I—estimates central BP relative to measured brachial BP; Type II—estimates intra-arterial central BP |
| Both function types may be available within a single device | |
| 2. Calibration of peripheral artery signals using brachial cuff BP | To achieve accurate non-invasive assessment of true central BP, more accurate non-invasive estimates of intra-arterial brachial BP are needed. Establishing more rigorous accuracy criteria for brachial BP is desirable. Current evidence suggests that calibration with MAP and DBP may provide a more accurate assessment of central BP than calibration with SBP and DBP |
| 3. Disparity in validation standards | The reference standard against which device accuracy of central BP estimation is gauged should be intra-arterial catheter in the ascending aorta. Details of the calibration method should be provided. If the brachial BP waveform undergoes recalibration to produce a ‘new’ brachial BP, then the recalibrated brachial BP values (and the method to derive them) should also be provided so that the level of estimated aorta-to-brachial systolic BP amplification can be gauged |
| 4. Limitations in performing invasive validation studies | In future, it may be reasonable to use non-invasive central BP devices as reference standards, but the acceptance criteria for this are yet to be determined |
Summary of central blood pressure (BP) device validation protocol components and requirements
| Protocol section | Protocol item | Protocol requirement | Protocol undertaken (circle yes/no….comment) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Study setting | Isolated room without disturbing influences | Should | YES NO…………………………………………… |
| Non-invasive central BP device measurement standards | List manufacturer, model, software version, operating principles, signal processing step/s, calibration processes | Must | YES NO…………………………………………… |
| Time for BP measures; time points of brachial BP and central BP; cuff deflation speed | Should | YES NO…………………………………………… | |
| Define and use appropriate cuff size | Must | YES NO…………………………………………… | |
| Dimensions of inflatable bladder for all cuff sizes available; process to determine cuff size | Should | YES NO…………………………………………… | |
| Process of familiarization with equipment | Should | YES NO…………………………………………… | |
| Separate validation studies for additional or optional features or functions | Must | YES NO…………………………………………… | |
| Process/s of quality control; process used to delineate acceptable quality; number of unacceptable readings; reason/s for exclusion | Must | YES NO…………………………………………… | |
| Invasive (intra-arterial) central BP reference standard | Micromanometer-tipped catheter used if minor inflection points to be identified | Should | YES NO…………………………………………… |
| Full description of catheter; frequency response and handling procedures | Must | YES NO…………………………………………… | |
| Performance comparison of fluid filled catheter with micromanometer-tipped catheter | May | YES NO…………………………………………… | |
| Data acquisition at rest | Period of undisturbed rest; medications used | Should | YES NO…………………………………………… |
| No talking. Free from acute hemodynamic interventions | Must | YES NO…………………………………………… | |
| Test device compared with reference over time-period matching the test device deflation cycle; recorded under stable conditions | Must | YES NO…………………………………………… | |
| Complete description of protocol; time interval between test device and reference measures | Must | YES NO…………………………………………… | |
| Data acquisition at BP intervention | Hemodynamic change from resting state | May | YES NO…………………………………………… |
| Description of the intervention procedure | Must | YES NO…………………………………………… |
SBP, systolic BP; DBP, diastolic BP. Complete details of protocol components and requirements are contained within the body text. Must, necessary component for highest quality; Should, strong recommendation, but probably not the only way that the component can be achieved; May, further guidance required.
Summary list of issues for consideration in development of an internationally accepted central blood pressure (BP) validation protocol
| Validation protocol features | Comments |
|---|---|
| Reference method | |
| Non-invasive reference standard | What criteria needed to satisfy for an acceptable non-invasive alternative to the invasive method which restricts study sample characteristics? |
| Error | |
| Minimum standard | What is the magnitude of the minimum acceptable error and its frequency based on the invasive reference standard? |
| Study sample | |
| Definition of general population sample | Which populations should be considered as special as there may be different device measurement accuracy from the general population, and therefore require separate validation? |
| Minimum sample size for a general population study | Based on the reference method for an acceptable statistical risk of false positive and negative results |
| Sample size for validations in special groups | To be defined after a successful study in the general population has been completed |
| Sex and age distribution | Representation of males and females, adolescents, young and middle aged adults and elderly |
| BP and heart rate range criteria | Based on reference central BP measurements and heart rate during the procedure? |
| Cuff size | Minimum number of subjects investigated per different cuff size, or number of different cuffs to be studied in a single study? |
| Exclusion criteria | On the basis of increased reference BP variation within individual validation procedures or clinical conditions |
| Procedural | |
| Number of measurements | Procedure for the number of reference and test BP measurements in a validation session |
| Comparison with reference | How to compare when operating characteristics differ between reference (i.e. beat-to-beat) and non-invasive test devices (i.e. averaging over seconds to minutes) and influence of respiratory variation and arrhythmias? |
| Reporting | |
| Data and pass criteria | What data, statistics and study features to be reported? What pass/fail criteria? |