Imputation of partial pressures of arterial oxygen using oximetry and its impact on sepsis diagnosis

Author:

Gadrey Shrirang M,Lau Chelsea E,Clay Russ,Rhodes Garret T,Lake Douglas E,Moore Christopher C,Voss John D,Moorman J Randall

Abstract

Abstract Objective: The ratio of the partial pressure of arterial oxygen to fraction of inspired oxygen is a key component of the sequential organ failure assessment score that operationally defines sepsis. But, it is calculated infrequently due to the need for the acquisition of an arterial blood gas. So, we sought to find an optimal imputation strategy for the estimation of sepsis-defining hypoxemic respiratory failure using oximetry instead of an arterial blood gas. Approach: We retrospectively studied a sample of non-intubated acute-care patients with oxygen saturation recorded  ⩽10 min before arterial blood sampling (N  =  492 from 2013–2017). We imputed ratios of the partial pressure of arterial oxygen to the fraction of inspired oxygen and sepsis criteria from existing imputation equations (Hill, Severinghaus–Ellis, Rice, and Pandharipande) and compared them with the ratios and sepsis criteria measured from arterial blood gases. We devised a modified model-based equation to eliminate the bias of the results. Main results: Hypoxemia severity estimates from the Severinghaus–Ellis equation were more accurate than those from other existing equations, but showed significant proportional bias towards under-estimation of hypoxemia severity, especially at oxygen saturations  >96%. Our modified equation eliminated bias and surpassed others on all imputation quality metrics. Significance: Our modified imputation equation, is the first one that is free of bias at all oxygen saturations. It resulted in ratios of partial pressure of arterial oxygen to fraction of inspired oxygen and sepsis respiratory criteria closest to those obtained by arterial blood gas testing and is the optimal imputation strategy for non-intubated acute-care patients.

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering,Physiology,Biophysics

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