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J Clin Monit Comput · Dec 2023
Observational StudyAccuracy of non-invasive sensors measuring core body temperature in cardiac surgery ICU patients - results from a monocentric prospective observational study.
- Georg Engelbart, Sebastian Brandt, Tobias Scheeren, Alexander Tzabazis, Oliver Kimberger, and Patrick Kellner.
- Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein, Ratzeburger Allee 160, D-23538, Lübeck, Germany.
- J Clin Monit Comput. 2023 Dec 1; 37 (6): 161916261619-1626.
PurposeTemperature monitoring in the perioperative setting often represents a compromise between accuracy, invasiveness of probe placement, and patient comfort. Transcutaneous sensors using the Zero-Heat-Flux (ZHF) and Double-Sensor (DS) technology have been developed and evaluated in a variety of clinical settings. The present study is the first to compare the performance of both sensors simultaneously with temperature measured by a Swan-Ganz catheter (PAC) in patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) after cardiac surgery.MethodsIn this monocentric prospective observational study patients were postoperatively transferred to the ICU and both sensors were placed on the patients' foreheads. Core body temperature measured by intraoperatively placed PAC served as gold standard. Measurements were recorded at 5-minute intervals and up to 40 data sets per patient were recorded. Bland and Altman's method for repeated measurements was used to analyse agreement. Subgroup analyses for gender, body-mass-index, core temperature, airway status and different time intervals were performed. Lin's concordance correlation coefficient (LCCC) was calculated, as well as sensitivity and specificity for detecting hyperthermia (≥ 38 °C) and hypothermia (< 36 °C).ResultsOver a period of six month, we collected 1600 sets of DS, ZHF, and PAC measurements, from a total of 40 patients. Bland-Altman analysis revealed a mean bias of -0.82 ± 1.27 °C (average ± 95% Limits-of-Agreement (LoA)) and - 0.54 ± 1.14 °C for DS and ZHF, respectively. The LCCC was 0.5 (DS) and 0.63 (ZHF). Mean bias was significantly higher in hyperthermic and hypothermic patients. Sensitivity and specificity were 0.12 / 0.99 (DS) and 0.35 / 1.0 (ZHF) for hyperthermia and 0.95 / 0.72 (DS) and 1.0 / 0.85 (ZHF) for hypothermia.ConclusionCore temperature was generally underestimated by the non-invasive approaches. In our study, ZHF outperformed DS. In terms of agreement, results for both sensors were outside the range that is considered clinically acceptable. Nevertheless, both sensors might be adequate to detect postoperative hypothermia reliably when more invasive methods are not available or appropriate.Trial RegistrationGerman Register of Clinical Trials (DRKS-ID: DRKS00027003), retrospectively registered 10/28/2021.© 2023. The Author(s).
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