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Accurate, precise, and comparable hemoglobin measurements is of great importance, both for clinical value in diagnosing anemia and ensuring pregnant women receive appropriate treatment. The Masimo Total Hemoglobin SpHb® is a continuous and non-invasive handheld device with an optical sensor placed on the finger that measures hemoglobin levels using pulse oximetry.
The objective of this study is evaluate the compatibility of hemoglobin measurements between SpHb and the gold standard laboratory-based assessment (complete blood count assessed via five-part autoanalyzer) throughout the course of pregnancy and at six weeks postpartum.
Full description
Anemia, a condition that affects an estimated 613 million (33%) women of reproductive age worldwide and is classified as a moderate to severe public health problem in many countries, is a secondary outcome in the PRiSMA MNH study. Three current PRiSMA MNH study sites conduct non-invasive and continuous hemoglobin monitoring with a Masimo device (Kenya, Pakistan, Zambia). Accurate, precise, and comparable hemoglobin measurements is of great importance, both for clinical value in diagnosing anemia and ensuring pregnant women receive appropriate treatment.
The Masimo Total Hemoglobin SpHb® is a continuous and non-invasive handheld device with an optical sensor placed on the finger that measures hemoglobin levels using pulse oximetry. The measurement takes under one minute and does not require blood samples or laboratory testing. These characteristics make it a particularly promising medical technology for low-resource areas.
Previous research studies have found that SpHb is able to accurately detect hemoglobin levels in adult patients with a similar degree of bias and standard deviation to point-of-care (PoC) invasive method (e.g., HemoCue device) measurements. However, high variability in bias and in limits of agreements for the Masimo device was found in a study involving pregnant patients.
The objective of this study is evaluate the compatibility of hemoglobin measurements between SpHb and CBC assessed via 5-part autoanalyzer throughout pregnancy and at six weeks postpartum.
This study is nested in the Pregnancy Risk Stratification Innovation and Measurement Alliance (PRiSMA) Maternal and Newborn Health (MNH) study. PRISMA MNH is a population-based, open-cohort study that seeks to evaluate pregnancy risk factors and their associations with adverse pregnancy outcomes in five countries in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia. Three study sites (located in Zambia, Kenya, and Pakistan) will participate and collect hemoglobin data at five time points (<20 weeks, 20 weeks, 28 weeks, 36 weeks gestation, and six weeks postpartum). The investigators will measure hemoglobin using a venous blood sample via auto-analyzer (gold standard) and the non-invasive device. The investigators will assess agreement between Masimo total hemoglobin and complete blood count and on a continuous scale using Intraclass Correlation Coefficient and Bland-Altman Analysis. The second objective is to assess agreement between the two measures on a binary scale using Positive Percentage Agreement and Negative Percentage Agreement, Cohen's Kappa, and McNemar Test. On an ordinal scale, agreement will be measured using Weighted Cohen's Kappa and Harrel's Concordance Index. Lastly, the investigators will assess factors that might affect the accuracy of Masimo total hemoglobin using linear mixed models.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Any participant that is eligible for the PRiSMA parent study is also considered eligible for this study. Inclusion criteria for the PRiSMA study is as follows:
Lives within the study catchment area;
Meets minimum age requirement in study site country:
Intrauterine pregnancy <20 weeks gestation verified via ultrasound at enrollment;
Provides informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria: Research staff may exclude women from the substudy based on the presence of injury, deformity, tattoo, or birthmark that interferes with Masimo sensor placement or performance or a finger size that does not appropriately fit the device.
900 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Emily R Smith, ScD, MPH; Fouzia Farooq, PhD, MPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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