A device for surveillance of vascular access sites for bleeding: results from a clinical evaluation trial

Author:

Chionh Chang Yin, ,Soh Desilyn Yuqing,Tan Chee How,Khaw Jien-Yi,Wong Ying Ching,Foong Shaohui

Abstract

Abstract Post-procedural wound haemorrhage is a potentially life-threatening complication. For haemodialysis patients, bleeding is often encountered after vascular access procedures and fatal episodes have been reported. Visual monitoring for bleeding is manpower intensive and bleeding episodes may still be missed between inspections. A device, Blood WArning Technology with Continuous Haemoglobin sensor (BWATCH), was developed to detect bleeding from wounds. This a prospective, observational clinical trial on patients who have had a dialysis catheter inserted or removed. The battery-powered, disc-shaped device (43 mm diameter, 12 mm height) was placed over the dressing for at least six hours. The device detects reflected light with characteristics specific for haemoglobin and an alarm would be triggered if bleeding occurs. There were 250 participants (177 post-insertion, 73 post-removal) and 36 episodes of bleeding occurred. The device alarm was triggered in all instances but there were also 9 false alarms. Specificity was 95.8%, false positive rate was 4.2% and positive predictive value was 80.0%. Sensitivity and negative predictive value were 100% but detection failure may still occur due to improper application or device maintenance. The use of technological aids for monitoring improves patient safety and may reduce demand on manpower.

Funder

National Health lnnovation Centre Singapore

Changi General Hospital–Singapore University of Technology and Design HealthTech Innovation Fund

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Evaluation of factors associated with bleeding following haemodialysis catheter-related procedures and the risk with anti-platelet agents;The Journal of Vascular Access;2023-08-01

2. Examination of a contact detection sensor to prevent self-removal of peripheral intravenous catheters*;2021 43rd Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine & Biology Society (EMBC);2021-11-01

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