An annotated ventricular tachycardia (VT) alarm database: Toward a uniform standard for optimizing automated VT identification in hospitalized patients

Author:

Pelter Michele M.1ORCID,Carey Mary G.2,Al‐Zaiti Salah3ORCID,Zegre‐Hemsey Jessica4,Sommargren Claire1,Isola Lamberto5ORCID,Prasad Priya6,Mortara David1,Badilini Fabio1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiological Nursing University of California San Francisco School of Nursing San Francisco California USA

2. School of Nursing University of Rochester Rochester New York USA

3. Department of Acute & Tertiary Care Nursing University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

4. School of Nursing University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

5. AMPS‐LLC New York New York USA

6. Department of Medicine Division of Hospital Medicine, School of Medicine University of California San Francisco California USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundFalse ventricular tachycardia (VT) alarms are common during in‐hospital electrocardiographic (ECG) monitoring. Prior research shows that the majority of false VT can be attributed to algorithm deficiencies.PurposeThe purpose of this study was: (1) to describe the creation of a VT database annotated by ECG experts and (2) to determine true vs. false VT using a new VT algorithm created by our group.MethodsThe VT algorithm was processed in 5320 consecutive ICU patients with 572,574 h of ECG and physiologic monitoring. A search algorithm identified potential VT, defined as: heart rate >100 beats/min, QRSs > 120 ms, and change in QRS morphology in >6 consecutive beats compared to the preceding native rhythm. Seven ECG channels, SpO2, and arterial blood pressure waveforms were processed and loaded into a web‐based annotation software program. Five PhD‐prepared nurse scientists performed the annotations.ResultsOf the 5320 ICU patients, 858 (16.13%) had 22,325 VTs. After three levels of iterative annotations, a total of 11,970 (53.62%) were adjudicated as true, 6485 (29.05%) as false, and 3870 (17.33%) were unresolved. The unresolved VTs were concentrated in 17 patients (1.98%). Of the 3870 unresolved VTs, 85.7% (n = 3281) were confounded by ventricular paced rhythm, 10.8% (n = 414) by underlying BBB, and 3.5% (n = 133) had a combination of both.ConclusionsThe database described here represents the single largest human‐annotated database to date. The database includes consecutive ICU patients, with true, false, and challenging VTs (unresolved) and could serve as a gold standard database to develop and test new VT algorithms.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,General Medicine

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