Sweat lactate sensor for detecting anaerobic threshold in heart failure: a prospective clinical trial (LacS-001)

Author:

Katsumata Yoshinori1,Muramoto Yuki1,Ishida Noriyuki2,Takemura Ryo2,Nagashima Kengo2,Ikoma Takenori3,Kawamatsu Naoto4,Araki Masaru5,Goda Ayumi6,Okawara Hiroki1,Sawada Tomonori1,Ichihara Kawakubo Yumiko1,Hattori Osamu1,Yamaoka Koki1,Seki Yuta1,Ryuzaki Toshinobu1,Ikura Hidehiko1,Nakashima Daisuke1,Nagura Takeo1,Nakamura Masaya1,Sato Kazuki1,Shiraishi Yasuyuki1

Affiliation:

1. Keio University School of Medicine

2. Keio University Hospital

3. Hamamatsu University School of Medicine

4. University of Tsukuba

5. University of Occupational and Environmental Health

6. Kyorin University Faculty of Medicine

Abstract

Abstract Background A simple method for determining the anaerobic threshold in patients with heart failure (HF) is needed. This prospective clinical trial (LacS-001) investigated the safety of a sweat lactate-monitoring sensor and the correlation between lactate threshold in sweat (sLT) and ventilatory threshold (VT). Methods We recruited 50 patients with HF and New York Heart Association functional classification I–II (mean age: 63.5 years, interquartile range: 58.0–72.0 years). Incremental exercise tests were conducted while monitoring sweat lactate levels using our sensor. sLT was defined as the first steep increase in lactate levels from baseline. Primary outcome measures were a correlation coefficient of ≥ 0.6 between sLT and VT, similarities as assessed by the Bland–Altman analysis, and standard deviation of the difference within 15 W. Results A correlation coefficient of 0.651 (95% confidence interval, 0.391–0.815) was achieved in 32/50 cases. The difference between sLT and VT was − 4.9 ± 15.0 W. No comparative error was noted in the Bland–Altman plot. No device-related adverse events were reported among the registered patients. Conclusions Our sweat lactate sensor is safe and accurate for detecting VT in patients with HF in clinical settings, thereby offering valuable additional information for treatment.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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