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Pilot Clinical Evaluation of the RHEA Vital Sign Vigilance System in Hospital Patients

Pilot Clinical Evaluation of the RHEA Vital Sign Vigilance System in Hospital Patients

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03257956
Enrollment
15
Registered
2017-08-22
Start date
2017-08-02
Completion date
2017-09-20
Last updated
2019-04-16

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Vital Sign Monitoring

Keywords

Vital Sign, Vigilance System, Heart Rate, Respiratory Rate

Brief summary

This study comparing both of the investigational device and reference device to gold standard Patient Monitor of the accuracy of heart rate and respiratory rate monitoring. The primary variables for the analysis of heart rate (HR) and respiratory rate (RR) are each the overall mean root mean square difference (RMSD). Results of the investigational device and reference device compared with the patient monitor are evaluated to see if there are equivalent. Motion and bed exit accuracy will be evaluated by comparing with the manual observation.

Detailed description

The testing will be conducted in three periods. In the Accuracy Tests (periods 1 and 2), one of the contact-free devices will be used to monitor the HR and RR, while being compared with the Patient Monitor. The RHEA investigational device and reference device will be used to monitor the same subject at different times, as the sensors of the two devices are placed at a similar location of the bed. HR and RR will be recorded for all three devices. The primary hypotheses for HR, are as follows: Adults HO: μ = 3.25 vs. HA: μ \< 3.25, Children HO: μ = 3.5 vs. HA: μ \< 3.5, The primary hypotheses for RR, are as follows: Adults HO: μ = 2.25 vs. HA: μ \< 2.25, Children HO: μ = 2.5 vs. HA: μ \< 2.5, where μ represents the population mean HR or RR. If the upper bound of the confidence interval is less than the hypothesized value, the corresponding null hypothesis will be rejected. Comparison of the performance of the two contact-free devices will be performed on the recorded results via statistical analysis. The hypothesis here is that the two devices have equivalent performance. The third test will assess the ability of the RHEA device to accurately detect motion on or exit from the bed, as compared to the manual observation. Motion and no motion accuracy will each be calculated along with their respective two-sided 95% confidence intervals.

Interventions

The RHEA device and Philips Patient Monitor MX400 are used to monitor the heart rate (HR) and respiratory rate (RR) of participants.

The reference device Earlysense 2.0 system(vital sign monitoring system) and Philips Patient Monitor MX400 are used to monitor the heart rate (HR) and respiratory rate (RR) of participants.

Sponsors

Tufts Medical Center
CollaboratorOTHER
Darma Inc.
Lead SponsorINDUSTRY

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
CROSSOVER
Primary purpose
SCREENING
Masking
NONE

Intervention model description

The RHEA device and Patient Monitor are used to monitor the heart rate (HR) and respiratory rate (RR) of participants at the same time in Test 1. The reference device and patient monitor are used to monitor the hear rate and respiratory rate of the same participant at the same time at Test 2. The two tests results will be compared and evaluated the accuracy of the two devices. And the RHEA device is used alone to evaluate the accuracy of motion and no motion.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. Male or female, 18 years old and above. 2. Provide written informed consent. 3. Weight ranging from 20 to 150 kg inclusive. 4. Are located in a non-ICU hospital setting. 5. Agree to not eat during the testing period. 6. Agree to keep still.

Exclusion criteria

1. Are connected to a device which may interfere with the device monitoring in this study. 2. Are receiving any bedside care which may be incompatible with the study procedures. 3. Sleep apnea. 4. Pregnant or breastfeeding. 5. A likely need to receive or undergo a procedure during the testing period. 6. Cannot accept a nasal cannula, or have a monitor lead placed on the chest. 7. A significant medical condition in the judgement of the investigator, which may compromise the study testing procedures. 8. Are wearing pacemaker or defibrillator.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
RMSD of Investigational Device's Heart Rate and Gold Standard Device's heart rate30 daysRecord 20 valid pair heart rate displayed in the investigational device and patient monitor at the same time every one minutes.Calculate the root mean square difference(RMSD) of the heart rate for the investigational device.
RMSD of Investigational Device's Respiratory Rate and Gold Standard Device's Respiratory rate30 daysRecord 20 valid pair respiratory rate displayed in the investigational device and patient monitor at the same time every one minutes.Calculate the root mean square difference(RMSD) of the respiratory rate for the investigational device.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Motion Notification Accuracy(%)30 daysRecord the time for each instructed movements from manual observation and time for movements notification shown in the investigational device. Calculate the times matched between these two to get the accuracy.
Heart Rate t Test Comparison result between the Investigational Device and the Reference Device30 daysRecord 20 valid heart rate displayed in the reference device and patient monitor at the same time every one minute. Calculate the t test results for heart rate for the reference device and the investigational device.
Respiratory Rate t Test Comparison result between the Investigational Device and the30 daysRecord 20 valid respiratory rate displayed in the reference device and patient monitor at the same time every one minute. Calculate the t test results for respiratory rate for the reference device and the investigational device.
Bed Exit Notification Accuracy(%)30 daysRecord the time for each instructed bed exit from manual observation and time for bed exit notification shown in the investigational device. Calculate the times matched between these two to get the accuracy.

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026