Performance of the Aktiia optical blood pressure measurement device in the elderly: a comparison with double blinded auscultation in different body positions.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_05F6671A3994
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Performance of the Aktiia optical blood pressure measurement device in the elderly: a comparison with double blinded auscultation in different body positions.
Journal
Blood pressure
ISSN
1651-1999 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0803-7051
Publication state
Published
Issued date
12/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
32
Number
1
Pages
2281320
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Randomized Controlled Trial ; Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Accurate blood pressure (BP) measurement is essential for the correct diagnosis and management of hypertension (HTN) especially in the elderly population. As with of all BP devices, the accuracy of cuffless devices must be verified. This study (NCT04027777) aimed to evaluate the performance of a wrist cuffless optical BP device in an elderly population cohort in different body positions with auscultation as the reference measurement.
Patients aged 65-85 years with different BP categories but without diabetes were recruited. After an initial calibration based on auscultatory measurements, BP estimation from the Aktiia Bracelet (Aktiia SA, Switzerland) were compared to reference double-blinded auscultatory measurements in sitting, standing and lying positions on four separate visits distributed over one month. In the absence of a universal standard for cuffless BP device at the time of the study, modified ISO81060-2 criteria were used for performance analysis.
Thirty-five participants were included in the analysis fulfilling the inclusion requirements of ISO 81060-2. A total of 469 paired measurements were obtained with overall 83% acceptance rate. Differences (mean ± SD) between Aktiia Bracelet and auscultation for systolic BP were -0.26 ± 9.96 mmHg for all body positions aggregated (sitting 1.23 ± 7.88 mmHg, standing -1.81 ± 11.11 mmHg, lying -1.8 ± 9.96 mmHg). Similarly, differences for diastolic BP were -0.75 ± 7.0 mmHg (0.2 ± 5.55 mmHg, -5.35 ± 7.75 mmHg and -0.94 ± 7.47 mmHg, respectively). Standard deviation of the averaged differences per subject for systolic/diastolic BP was 3.8/2.5 mmHg in sitting and 4.4/3.7 mmHg for all body positions aggregated.
Overall, this study demonstrates a similar performance of the Aktiia Bracelet compared to auscultation in an elderly population in body positions representative of daily activities. The use of more comfortable, non-invasive, and non-occlusive BP monitors during long periods may facilitate e-health and may contribute to better management of HTN, including diagnosis and treatment of HTN, in the elderly.
Patients aged 65-85 years with different BP categories but without diabetes were recruited. After an initial calibration based on auscultatory measurements, BP estimation from the Aktiia Bracelet (Aktiia SA, Switzerland) were compared to reference double-blinded auscultatory measurements in sitting, standing and lying positions on four separate visits distributed over one month. In the absence of a universal standard for cuffless BP device at the time of the study, modified ISO81060-2 criteria were used for performance analysis.
Thirty-five participants were included in the analysis fulfilling the inclusion requirements of ISO 81060-2. A total of 469 paired measurements were obtained with overall 83% acceptance rate. Differences (mean ± SD) between Aktiia Bracelet and auscultation for systolic BP were -0.26 ± 9.96 mmHg for all body positions aggregated (sitting 1.23 ± 7.88 mmHg, standing -1.81 ± 11.11 mmHg, lying -1.8 ± 9.96 mmHg). Similarly, differences for diastolic BP were -0.75 ± 7.0 mmHg (0.2 ± 5.55 mmHg, -5.35 ± 7.75 mmHg and -0.94 ± 7.47 mmHg, respectively). Standard deviation of the averaged differences per subject for systolic/diastolic BP was 3.8/2.5 mmHg in sitting and 4.4/3.7 mmHg for all body positions aggregated.
Overall, this study demonstrates a similar performance of the Aktiia Bracelet compared to auscultation in an elderly population in body positions representative of daily activities. The use of more comfortable, non-invasive, and non-occlusive BP monitors during long periods may facilitate e-health and may contribute to better management of HTN, including diagnosis and treatment of HTN, in the elderly.
Keywords
Humans, Aged, Blood Pressure/physiology, Blood Pressure Determination, Hypertension/diagnosis, Auscultation, Posture, auscultatory, blood pressure measurement, cuffless, elderly
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
23/11/2023 15:35
Last modification date
20/12/2023 7:15