An algorithm for QT interval monitoring in neonatal intensive care units

Abstract QT surveillance of neonatal patients, and especially premature infants, may be important because of the potential for concomitant exposure to QT-prolonging medications and because of the possibility that they may have hereditary QT prolongation (long-QT syndrome), which is implicated in the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of electrocardiology 2007-11, Vol.40 (6), p.S103-S110
Hauptverfasser: Helfenbein, Eric D., MS, Ackerman, Michael J., MD, PhD, Rautaharju, Pentti M., MD, PhD, Zhou, Sophia H., PhD, Gregg, Richard E., MS, Lindauer, James M., MD, Miller, David, BMET, Wang, John J., MS, Kresge, Scott S., BS, Babaeizadeh, Saeed, PhD, Feild, Dirk Q., MA, Michaud, Francis P., MS
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract QT surveillance of neonatal patients, and especially premature infants, may be important because of the potential for concomitant exposure to QT-prolonging medications and because of the possibility that they may have hereditary QT prolongation (long-QT syndrome), which is implicated in the pathogenesis of approximately 10% of sudden infant death syndrome. In-hospital automated continuous QT interval monitoring for neonatal and pediatric patients may be beneficial but is difficult because of high heart rates; inverted, biphasic, or low-amplitude T waves; noisy signal; and a limited number of electrocardiogram (ECG) leads available. Based on our previous work on an automated adult QT interval monitoring algorithm, we further enhanced and expanded the algorithm for application in the neonatal and pediatric patient population. This article presents results from evaluation of the new algorithm in neonatal patients. Neonatal-monitoring ECGs (n = 66; admission age range, birth to 2 weeks) were collected from the neonatal intensive care unit in 2 major teaching hospitals in the United States. Each digital recording was at least 10 minutes in length with a sampling rate of 500 samples per second. Special handling of high heart rate was implemented, and threshold values were adjusted specifically for neonatal ECG. The ECGs studied were divided into a development/training ECG data set (TRN), with 24 recordings from hospital 1, and a testing data set (TST), with 42 recordings composed of cases from both hospital 1 (n = 16) and hospital 2 (n = 26). Each ECG recording was manually annotated for QT interval in a 15-second period by 2 cardiologists. Mean and standard deviation of the difference (algorithm minus cardiologist), regression slope, and correlation coefficient were used to describe algorithm accuracy. Considering the technical problems due to noisy recordings, a high fraction (approximately 80%) of the ECGs studied were measurable by the algorithm. Mean and standard deviation of the error were both low (TRN = −3 ± 8 milliseconds; TST = 1 ± 20 milliseconds); regression slope (TRN = 0.94; TST = 0.83) and correlation coefficients (TRN = 0.96; TST = 0.85) ( P < .0001) were fairly high. Performance on the TST was similar to that on the TRN with the exception of 2 cases. These results confirm that automated continuous QT interval monitoring in the neonatal intensive care setting is feasible and accurate and may lead to earlier recognition of the “vulnerable
ISSN:0022-0736
1532-8430
DOI:10.1016/j.jelectrocard.2007.06.019