by Carlos Areia, Christopher Biggs, Mauro Santos, Neal
Thurley, Stephen Gerry, Lionel Tarassenko, Peter Watkinson and Sarah Vollam
Critical Care volume 25,
Article number: 351; Published: 28
September 2021
Background
Timely recognition of the deteriorating inpatient remains
challenging. Wearable monitoring systems (WMS) may augment current monitoring
practices. However, there are many barriers to implementation in the hospital
environment, and evidence describing the clinical impact of WMS on
deterioration detection and patient outcome remains unclear.
Objective
To assess the impact of vital-sign monitoring on detection
of deterioration and related clinical outcomes in hospitalised patients using
WMS, in comparison with standard care.
Methods
A systematic search was conducted in August 2020 using
MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, CENTRAL,
Health Technology Assessment databases and grey literature. Studies comparing
the use of WMS against standard care for deterioration detection and related
clinical outcomes in hospitalised patients were included. Deterioration related
outcomes (primary) included unplanned intensive care admissions, rapid response
team or cardiac arrest activation, total and major complications rate. Other
clinical outcomes (secondary) included in-hospital mortality and hospital
length of stay. Exploratory outcomes included alerting system parameters and
clinical trial registry information.
Results
Of 8706 citations, 10 studies with different designs met the
inclusion criteria, of which 7 were included in the meta-analyses. Overall
study quality was moderate. The meta-analysis indicated that the WMS, when
compared with standard care, was not associated with significant reductions in
intensive care transfers (risk ratio, RR 0.87; 95% confidence interval, CI
0.66–1.15), rapid response or cardiac arrest team activation (RR 0.84; 95% CI
0.69–1.01), total (RR 0.77; 95% CI 0.44–1.32) and major (RR 0.55; 95% CI
0.24–1.30) complications prevalence. There was also no statistically
significant association with reduced mortality (RR 0.48; 95% CI 0.18–1.29) and
hospital length of stay (mean difference, MD − 0.09; 95% CI − 0.43 to 0.44).
Conclusion
This systematic review indicates that there is no current
evidence that implementation of WMS impacts early deterioration detection and
associated clinical outcomes, as differing design/quality of available studies
and diversity of outcome measures make it difficult to reach a definite
conclusion. Our narrative findings suggested that alarms should be adjusted to
minimise false alarms and promote rapid clinical action in response to
deterioration.
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