| Literature DB >> 32734356 |
Florian Alexander Michael1, Jan Peveling-Oberhag2,3, Eva Herrmann4, Stefan Zeuzem2, Jörg Bojunga2, Mireen Friedrich-Rust2.
Abstract
Standard monitoring of heart rate, blood pressure and arterial oxygen saturation during endoscopy is recommended by current guidelines on procedural sedation. A number of studies indicated a reduction of hypoxic (art. oxygenation < 90% for > 15 s) and severe hypoxic events (art. oxygenation < 85%) by additional use of capnography. Therefore, U.S. and the European guidelines comment that additional capnography monitoring can be considered in long or deep sedation. Integrated Pulmonary Index® (IPI) is an algorithm-based monitoring parameter that combines oxygenation measured by pulse oximetry (art. oxygenation, heart rate) and ventilation measured by capnography (respiratory rate, apnea > 10 s, partial pressure of end-tidal carbon dioxide [PetCO2]). The aim of this paper was to analyze the value of IPI as parameter to monitor the respiratory status in patients receiving propofol sedation during PEG-procedure. Patients reporting for PEG-placement under sedation were randomized 1:1 in either standard monitoring group (SM) or capnography monitoring group including IPI (IM). Heart rate, blood pressure and arterial oxygen saturation were monitored in SM. In IM additional monitoring was performed measuring PetCO2, respiratory rate and IPI. Capnography and IPI values were recorded for all patients but were only visible to the endoscopic team for the IM-group. IPI values range between 1 and 10 (10 = normal; 8-9 = within normal range; 7 = close to normal range, requires attention; 5-6 = requires attention and may require intervention; 3-4 = requires intervention; 1-2 requires immediate intervention). Results on capnography versus standard monitoring of the same study population was published previously. A total of 147 patients (74 in SM and 73 in IM) were included in the present study. Hypoxic events occurred in 62 patients (42%) and severe hypoxic events in 44 patients (29%), respectively. Baseline characteristics were equally distributed in both groups. IPI = 1, IPI < 7 as well as the parameters PetCO2 = 0 mmHg and apnea > 10 s had a high sensitivity for hypoxic and severe hypoxic events, respectively (IPI = 1: 81%/81% [hypoxic/severe hypoxic event], IPI < 7: 82%/88%, PetCO2: 69%/68%, apnea > 10 s: 84%/84%). All four parameters had a low specificity for both hypoxic and severe hypoxic events (IPI = 1: 13%/12%, IPI < 7: 7%/7%, PetCO2: 29%/27%, apnea > 10 s: 7%/7%). In multivariate analysis, only SM and PetCO2 = 0 mmHg were independent risk factors for hypoxia. IPI (IPI = 1 and IPI < 7) as well as the individual parameters PetCO2 = 0 mmHg and apnea > 10 s allow a fast and convenient conclusion on patients' respiratory status in a morbid patient population. Sensitivity is good for most parameters, but specificity is poor. In conclusion, IPI can be a useful metric to assess respiratory status during propofol-sedation in PEG-placement. However, IPI was not superior to PetCO2 and apnea > 10 s.Entities:
Keywords: Capnography; Endoscopy; Hypoxia; Integrated Pulmonary Index; Monitoring; Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32734356 PMCID: PMC8497449 DOI: 10.1007/s10877-020-00563-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Monit Comput ISSN: 1387-1307 Impact factor: 2.502
Patient status according to the Integrated Pulmonary Index® (IPI)
| IPI | Patient status |
| 10 | Normal |
| 8–9 | Within normal range |
| 7 | Close to normal range, requires attention |
| 5–6 | Requires attention and may require intervention |
| 3–4 | Requires intervention |
| 1–2 | Requires immediate intervention |
Baseline values
| SM (n = 74) | IM (n = 73) | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arterial oxygenation | 97.91 ± 2.43 | 97.78 ± 2.27 | 0.52 |
| Heart rate | 79.43 ± 15.02 | 77.49 ± 14.80 | 0.59 |
| Respiratory rate | 18.05 ± 5.32 | 19.11 ± 10.28 | 0.73 |
| PetCO2 | 31.77 ± 6.61 | 32.64 ± 4.74 | 0.91 |
| IPI | 8.82 ± 1.62 | 9.33 ± 1.11 | 0.06 |
SM standard monitoring group, IM standard monitoring group + IPI, IPI Integrated Pulmonary Index®, PetCO partial pressure of end-tidal carbon dioxide = 0 mmHg
Events, time to hypoxia/severe hypoxia and sensitivity and specificity
| Count in all procedures | Hypoxic events | Time to hypoxic event | Severe hypoxic events | Time to severe hypoxic event (s) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | Specificity | Sensitivity | Specificity | ||||
| IPI < 7 | 740 | 82% | 7% | 89 | 88% | 7% | 99 |
| IPI = 1 | 606 | 81% | 13% | 83 | 81% | 12% | 97 |
| PetCO2 | 431 | 69% | 29% | 84 | 68% | 27% | 87 |
| Apnea | 763 | 84% | 7% | 83 | 84% | 7% | 99 |
IPI Integrated Pulmonary Index®, PetCO partial pressure of end-tidal carbon dioxide 0 mmHg, Apnea Apnea > 10 s
Relation between hypoxia and severe hypoxia to IPI and basic parameters
| Hypoxia | Severe Hypoxia | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | No | p-value | Yes | No | p-value | |
| IPI = 1 | 61 (98%) | 74 (87%) | 44 (100%) | 91 (88%) | ||
| IPI < 7 | 61 (98%) | 79 (93%) | 0.24 | 44 (100%) | 96 (93% | 0.10 |
| PetCO2 | 56 (90%) | 60 (71%) | 41 (93%) | 75 (73%) | ||
| Apnea | 61 (98%) | 79 (93%) | 44 (100%) | 96 (93%) | 0.10 | |
| Tachypnoe | 65 (77%) | 49 (80%) | 0.67 | 36 (82%) | 78 (77%) | 0.54 |
| Tachycardia | 47 (76%) | 49 (58%) | 33 (75%) | 63 (61%) | 0.11 | |
| Bradycardia | 4 (6%) | 3 (4%) | 0.41 | 4 (9%) | 3 (3%) | 0.11 |
| Hypertension | 48 (77%) | 53 (62%) | 33 (75%) | 68 (66%) | 0.28 | |
| Hypotension | 13 (21%) | 13 (15%) | 0.37 | 13 (30%) | 13 (13%) | |
Bold indicates the significant p-value < 0.05
IPI Integrated Pulmonary Index®, PetCO partial pressure of end-tidal carbon dioxide = 0 mmHg, Apnea respiratory rate = 0/min > 10 sec, tachypnoea respiratory rate > 20/min > 10 s, tachycardia heart rate > 90/min, bradycardia heart rate < 50/min, hypertension > 140 mmHg systolic pressure, hypotension < 100 mmHg systolic pressure
Results of multivariate analysis
| Hypoxia | Severe Hypoxia | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Odds ratio | 95% CI | p-value | Odds ratio | 95% CI | p-value | |
| SM | 4.5 | 2.2–9.1 | 4.4 | 1.8–10.0 | ||
| PetCO2 | 12.3 | 1.7–10.2 | 7.9 | 1.9–33.7 | ||
Bold indicates the significant p-value < 0.05
95% CI 95% confidence interval, SM standard monitoring group, PetCO partial pressure of end-tidal carbon dioxide = 0 mmHg