Novel transcutaneous sensor combining optical tcPO2 and electrochemical tcPCO2 monitoring with reflectance pulse oximetry

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

Willem van Weteringen (Erasmus MC)

Tom G. Goos (Erasmus MC, TU Delft - Medical Instruments & Bio-Inspired Technology)

Tanja Van Essen (Erasmus MC)

Christoph Ellenberger (SenTec AG)

Josef Hayoz (SenTec AG)

Rogier C.J. de Jonge (Erasmus MC)

Irwin Reiss (Erasmus MC)

Peter M. Schumacher (SenTec AG)

Research Group
Medical Instruments & Bio-Inspired Technology
Copyright
© 2020 Willem van Weteringen, T.G. Goos, Tanja van Essen, Christoph Ellenberger, Josef Hayoz, Rogier C.J. de Jonge, Irwin K.M. Reiss, Peter M. Schumacher
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11517-019-02067-x
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 Willem van Weteringen, T.G. Goos, Tanja van Essen, Christoph Ellenberger, Josef Hayoz, Rogier C.J. de Jonge, Irwin K.M. Reiss, Peter M. Schumacher
Research Group
Medical Instruments & Bio-Inspired Technology
Issue number
2
Volume number
58
Pages (from-to)
239-247
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

This study investigated the accuracy, drift, and clinical usefulness of a new optical transcutaneous oxygen tension (tcPO2) measuring technique, combined with a conventional electrochemical transcutaneous carbon dioxide (tcPCO2) measurement and reflectance pulse oximetry in the novel transcutaneous OxiVenT™ Sensor. In vitro gas studies were performed to measure accuracy and drift of tcPO2 and tcPCO2. Clinical usefulness for tcPO2 and tcPCO2 monitoring was assessed in neonates. In healthy adult volunteers, measured oxygen saturation values (SpO2) were compared with arterially sampled oxygen saturation values (SaO2) during controlled hypoxemia. In vitro correlation and agreement with gas mixtures of tcPO2 (r = 0.999, bias 3.0 mm Hg, limits of agreement − 6.6 to 4.9 mm Hg) and tcPCO2 (r = 0.999, bias 0.8 mm Hg, limits of agreement − 0.7 to 2.2 mm Hg) were excellent. In vitro drift was negligible for tcPO2 (0.30 (0.63 SD) mm Hg/24 h) and highly acceptable for tcPCO2 (− 2.53 (1.04 SD) mm Hg/12 h). Clinical use in neonates showed good usability and feasibility. SpO2-SaO2 correlation (r = 0.979) and agreement (bias 0.13%, limits of agreement − 3.95 to 4.21%) in healthy adult volunteers were excellent. The investigated combined tcPO2, tcPCO2, and SpO2 sensor with a new oxygen fluorescence quenching technique is clinically usable and provides good overall accuracy and negligible tcPO2 drift. Accurate and low-drift tcPO2 monitoring offers improved measurement validity for long-term monitoring of blood and tissue oxygenation. [Figure not available: see fulltext.].