Overview
The aim of this clinical trial is to examine the feasibility of an enhanced vital sign monitoring solution in-hospital and at-home. This study includes adult patients undergoing inpatient major vascular or abdominal surgery. Researchers will compare the enhanced vitals monitoring group to the standard of care group to see if it may change post-operative management and outcomes. The primary question it aims to answer is if enhanced monitoring of surgical patient vitals can increase the number of days at home alive in the first 30 days after surgery. Participants in the intervention group will test two vitals monitoring devices, one in the hospital and one at home. They will also be asked to complete several questionnaires and a follow up phone call.
Description
After surgeries, patients are at risk of a variety of complications, thus requiring monitoring for early detection and treatment of complications. The current standard of care consists of continuous monitoring of vital signs during and after anesthetic and/or in the high-acuity and intensive care units, followed by intermittent measurement of vital signs once the patient is in the ward. Once the patient is at home, there is no monitoring nor follow-up.
However, it has been well-established that existing intermittent monitoring of vital signs are too infrequent to capture important vital sign derangements. For example, in an observational study of 312 patients who underwent abdominal surgery, 18% of patients had blood pressure \<65 mmHg for at least 15 minutes that were not detected by conventional intermittent monitoring. Nevertheless, it remains unknown the optimal method and duration of increased monitoring for medium-to-high risk surgical patients in-hospital and at home. In a randomized controlled trial (RCT) involving 905 adults undergoing non-elective surgery, remote automated monitoring with virtual care did not reduce the number of days alive and at home 30 days after surgery (DAH30) compared to standard of care. However, there are signals of increased detection of drug errors, decreased pain, and benefits in patients in centres with more escalations in care.
This study is a single-blinded, parallel-group, pilot RCT, with an exploratory feasibility analysis. The study will be reported according to the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) pilot RCT standards.
The study will be conducted at St Paul's Hospital (SPH), Providence Health Care (PHC), in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, an academic tertiary care hospital affiliated with the University of British Columbia. The study will also run at and Mount Saint Joseph's (MSJ) Hospital, PHC. The PHC anesthesia and surgical program already has a strong perioperative care focus, featuring enhanced postoperative support available for high risk patients including 1) surgical high-acuity unit (SHAU) with continuous monitoring, run by anesthesiologists, 2) Perioperative Outreach Team that rounds on patients daily for as long as clinically indicated, run by anesthesiologists, 3) multidisciplinary collaboration and support from perioperative internal medicine and/or geriatric teams, with daily rounding for as long as clinically indicated and availability for preoperative consultation and post-discharge follow-up in rapid access clinics, and 4) protocolized monitoring for myocardial injury after non-cardiac surgery for three days according to the Canadian Cardiovascular Society guidelines.
The objective of the study is to obtain pilot data on the enhanced monitoring of vital signs in patients undergoing inpatient major abdominal and/or vascular surgery (i.e. continuous monitoring of vital signs in-hospital (from the day of surgery until 3 days after surgery) followed by twice-daily monitoring at home for 3 days after discharge, with a protocol for care escalation if needed, compared to standard monitoring (intermittent monitoring in-hospital and no monitoring at home).
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Undergoing inpatient major abdominal (general surgery, urology, or gynecology) or vascular surgery at St. Paul's Hospital (SPH) and Mount Saint Joseph (MSJ) Hospital
- Length of stay of at least 48 hours (planned by the clinical team, or by the Canadian Institute of Health Information Discharge Abstract Database Expected Length of Stay (ELOS) for the surgical case mix group
- Self-reported fluency in reading and speaking in English for patient or home caregiver
- Living within British Columbia, Canada and in an area that is covered by Bell cellular network (the Cloud DX Inc. device has cellular Long Term Evolution (LTE) using the Bell network).
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patient refusal
- Transplant surgery, since these patients have a unique set of considerations and postoperative course.
- Inability to communicate with research personnel, perform self-monitoring of vital signs, or complete study surveys due to cognitive, language, visual, or hearing barriers
- Lack of capacity to consent to the study (including under the active influence of sedative medication or having received general anesthetic within the past 24 hours)
- Unable to use (or does not have a caregiver who can help put on/take off) study monitoring device at home
- Preoperatively known planned discharge to a nursing home or rehabilitation facility
- Patient with known allergic reactions to any part material of the device
- Unable to monitor blood pressure accurately noninvasively using arm blood pressure cuffs, such as due to underlying vascular anatomy or non-pulsatile blood flow physiology
- Unlikely to be able to return the home monitoring kit (no fixed address, living too far away from site, etc.)