Physical fitness levels of people waiting for a planned operation are often measured using an exercise test. This is because fitness levels help doctors make a plan to improve each person's chances of a successful recovery after their planned operation. The exercise test requires skilled staff, expensive equipment, a 1 hour appointment, and the patient to exercise heavily during the test. Ventriject, a small to medium sized enterprise, have designed a device called Seismofit that estimates fitness levels of people from a measurement taken whilst laying down. It measures the vibrations of the chest wall caused by the beating heart and uses this information with additional information, such as height, weight and sex, to estimate fitness. The measurement takes around 5 minutes to perform, does not require heavy exercise, expensive equipment or skilled staff. The Seismofit device was shown to be accurate in young fairly fit people. It has not been tested in people who undergo an exercise test before an operation, who are less fit on average compared to the people that the device was originally tested on. It is likely that the calculations used to estimate fitness levels with the Seismofit device will need to be adjusted for people waiting for an operation. There are two parts to this study. The first part aims to estimate up to 50 people's fitness with the Seismofit device and use directly measured fitness from their standard exercise test before their operation to adjust the calculations for estimating fitness. The second part of this study aims to have a further 50 people undergo the Seismofit device measurement and compare the estimated fitness level with the results from the standard exercise test before an operation. This is to see if the Seismofit device is valid at estimating fitness in people awaiting surgery.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
143
The Seismofit device uses seismocardiography to estimate peak oxygen consumption from a resting measurement. This study will assess its validity against the gold standard measure of peak oxygen consumption, cardiopulmonary exercise test, conducted as part of standard care.
South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Middlesbrough, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGSheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Sheffield, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGYork and Scarborough NHS Foundation Trust
York, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGPhase 1 outcome - refine algorithm
Up to 50 patients awaiting major surgery will have their estimated V̇O2peak (ml/kg/min) recorded using the Seismofit device and actual V̇O2peak (ml/kg/min) measured in their standard preoperative cardiopulmonary exercise test. The Seismofit algorithm will be adjusted using these data points with machine learning.
Time frame: Up to 6 months
Phase 2 outcome - validity of refined algorithm
The correlation between the new seismofit algorithm estimate of V̇O2peak (ml/kg/min) and CPET measured and verified V̇O2peak (ml/kg/min) in up to 50 preoperative patients that have valid tests in accordance with maximal exercise test criteria stated in the protocol (RER \> 1.10 or maximum heart rate attained within 10 beats of predicted maximum).
Time frame: 12 months
Bland-Altman analysis
Agreement between Seismofit estimated V̇O2peak (ml/kg/min) and CPET measured V̇O2peak (ml/kg/min) using Bland-Altman analysis.
Time frame: 12 months
Existing V̇O2peak predicted equation analysis
To calculate the correlation and agreement between existing equations used to predict V̇O2peak (ml/kg/min) with directly measured V̇O2peak (ml/kg/min) to observe how these data compare with the Seismofit correlation and agreement data.
Time frame: 12 months
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