Improving diagnosis of early complications (<1 week) through continuous vital sign monitoring following oncological gastrointestinal surgical procedures

Author:

Lockhorst Elize W.12ORCID,van Noordenne Milicia1,Klouwens Linda1,Govaert Klaas M.3,de Bruijn Eva1,Verhoef Cornelis2,Gobardhan Paul D.1,Schreinemakers Jennifer M. J.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery Amphia Hospital Breda Breda The Netherlands

2. Department of Surgical Oncology and Gastrointestinal Surgery Erasmus MC University Cancer Institute Rotterdam The Netherlands

3. Department of Surgery Maasziekenhuis Pantein Boxmeer The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPatients undergoing major oncological abdominal surgery are prone to postoperative complications, making early recognition crucial. Clinical deterioration is often preceded by changes in vital signs, which are typically measured thrice a day by a nurse. However, intermittent measurements may delay recognizing clinical deterioration. Continuous vital parameter monitoring may lead to earlier recognition and management of complications and reduce nursing workload.ObjectiveTo compare vital parameter measurements between ward nurses and a wireless continuous monitoring system (Sensium® wireless patch) and assess whether this patch can detect clinical deterioration earlier in patients with complications in the first postoperative week.MethodsVital parameters (heart rate, respiratory rate, and temperature) were collected in patients undergoing an oncological resection of the liver, colorectal, or pancreas. Sensium® patch measurements were compared to nurses' measurements to assess the percentages of discordant measurements. In patients with complications in the first postoperative week, time discrepancies between nurses and Sensium® patch measurements were identified in cases of clinical deterioration (respiratory rate ≥15/min, heart rate ≥100/min, and temperature ≥38°C).ResultsAmong 227 patients, 22% of the patients experienced complications. Nurse and Sensium® measurements were discrepant in 586/2272 measurements (26%). In 506/586 discrepancies (86%), this was due to the respiratory rate (difference ≥4/min). Compared to nurses, the Sensium® patch detected an elevated respiratory rate 14 h earlier and heart rate 2 h earlier within complications in the first postoperative week. For temperature, no difference was observed.ConclusionContinuous monitoring with the Sensium® wireless patch holds promise for earlier recognition of complications in patients who underwent major oncological abdominal surgery.

Publisher

Wiley

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