Reliability of Home Spirometry Compared to Traditional Clinic Spirometry in an Adult Cystic Fibrosis Population

J. Barry, J. Soriano, P. Akuthota, D. Conrad
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

RATIONALE: The potential risk of acquiring COVID-19 has presented a particular challenge to delivering in-person outpatient care, especially to patients with chronic respiratory diseases who may be hesitant to come to clinic. Though much of an interdisciplinary visit for cystic fibrosis can be performed via telehealth, in-clinic spirometry is an important part of disease monitoring. Home spirometry has been proposed as a way to improve telehealth in cystic fibrosis care. Here we examine the reliability of home spirometers in an adult cystic fibrosis clinic. METHODS: Patients received home spirometers (Mir Spirobank Smart, n = 38) from the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation or obtained their own Microlife home spirometers (n = 2). They were instructed to bring their home spirometer to clinic for teaching and comparison with the calibrated clinical spirometer. Initial patient demographics, exacerbations in the last year, current symptoms, home airway clearance and inhaler regimen were recorded. After the initial visit, patients were emailed links to report symptoms and record home spirometry weekly or with worsening of their symptoms. Data was recorded in REDCap and analyzed in RStudio version 1.3.1056. RESULTS: A total of 40 patients have completed the initial clinic visit and teaching for their home spirometers. The clinic and home spirometers were very highly correlated when measuring forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) with a Pearson correlation coefficient 0.993 (P < 0.001) with the clinic spirometer recording a higher value, on average, of 0.072 ± 0.11 L (mean ± standard deviation). Of the 36 patients that had a home spirometer forced vital capacity (FVC) recorded, the correlation coefficient was 0.946 (P < 0.001) with the clinic spirometer recording a higher value of 0.134 ± 0.31 L on average. Measurements of percent predicted of FEV1 and FVC had Pearson correlation coefficients of 0.987 (P<0.001) and 0.953 (P<0.001), respectively, with clinic spirometers showing higher values, on average, of 0.806 ± 3.54 % and 1.31 ± 1.12 %, respectively. Peak expiratory flow (L/s), on the contrary, tended to be higher on the home devices by 0.542 ± 1.12 L/s on average, with a Pearson correlation coefficient of 0.857 between devices. Home spirometry measurements are ongoing. CONCLUSIONS: Home spirometry provide similar estimates of lung function compared to standard in-clinic devices and could play a useful role in the longitudinal telehealth care of cystic fibrosis patients. The reliability of their measurements in the home environment is currently ongoing.
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成人囊性纤维化人群家庭肺活量测定与传统临床肺活量测定的可靠性比较
理由:感染COVID-19的潜在风险对提供面对面门诊护理提出了特别挑战,特别是对那些可能不愿去诊所的慢性呼吸道疾病患者。尽管许多囊性纤维化的跨学科访问可以通过远程医疗进行,但临床肺活量测定是疾病监测的重要组成部分。家庭肺活量测定已被提出作为一种方法,以改善远程医疗在囊性纤维化护理。在这里,我们检查的可靠性家庭肺活量计在成人囊性纤维化诊所。方法:患者从囊性纤维化基金会获得家用肺活量计(Mir Spirobank Smart, n = 38)或获得自己的Microlife家用肺活量计(n = 2)。他们被指示将自己的家用肺活量计带到诊所进行教学,并与校准的临床肺活量计进行比较。记录了最初的患者人口统计数据、去年的恶化情况、当前症状、家庭气道清除率和吸入器方案。初次就诊后,患者通过电子邮件发送链接,每周报告症状并记录家庭肺活量或症状恶化。数据在REDCap中记录,在RStudio 1.3.1056版本中分析。结果:共有40例患者完成了首次临床访问和家用肺活量计的教学。临床肺活量计与家庭肺活量计在测量1秒用力呼气量(FEV1)时相关性非常高,Pearson相关系数为0.993 (P <0.001),临床肺活计记录的数值更高,平均为0.072±0.11 L(平均值±标准差)。36例使用家用肺活量计测定肺活量(FVC)的患者,相关系数为0.946 (P <0.001),临床肺活量计记录的数值更高,平均为0.134±0.31 L。FEV1和FVC的预测百分数的Pearson相关系数分别为0.987 (P<0.001)和0.953 (P<0.001),临床肺活量计显示更高的数值,平均分别为0.806±3.54%和1.31±1.12%。相反,家用设备的呼气峰流量(L/s)平均要高0.542±1.12 L/s,设备间的Pearson相关系数为0.857。正在进行家庭肺活量测定。结论:与标准的临床设备相比,家庭肺活量测定提供了相似的肺功能估计,并且可以在囊性纤维化患者的纵向远程医疗保健中发挥有用的作用。他们在家庭环境中测量的可靠性目前正在进行中。
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