Racial and skin color mediated disparities in pulse oximetry in infants and young children

IF 4.7 3区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS Paediatric Respiratory Reviews Pub Date : 2024-06-01 DOI:10.1016/j.prrv.2023.12.006
Megha Sharma , Andrew W Brown , Nicholas M. Powell , Narasimhan Rajaram , Lauren Tong , Peter M. Mourani , Mario Schootman
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Abstract

Race-based and skin pigmentation-related inaccuracies in pulse oximetry have recently been highlighted in several large electronic health record-based retrospective cohort studies across diverse patient populations and healthcare settings. Overestimation of oxygen saturation by pulse oximeters, particularly in hypoxic states, is disparately higher in Black compared to other racial groups. Compared to adult literature, pediatric studies are relatively few and mostly reliant on birth certificates or maternal race-based classification of comparison groups. Neonates, infants, and young children are particularly susceptible to the adverse life-long consequences of hypoxia and hyperoxia. Successful neonatal resuscitation, precise monitoring of preterm and term neonates with predominantly lung pathology, screening for congenital heart defects, and critical decisions on home oxygen, ventilator support and medication therapies, are only a few examples of situations that are highly reliant on the accuracy of pulse oximetry. Undetected hypoxia, especially if systematically different in certain racial groups may delay appropriate therapies and may further perpetuate health care disparities. The role of biological factors that may differ between racial groups, particularly skin pigmentation that may contribute to biased pulse oximeter readings needs further evaluation. Developmental and maturational changes in skin physiology and pigmentation, and its interaction with the operating principles of pulse oximetry need further study. Importantly, clinicians should recognize the limitations of pulse oximetry and use additional objective measures of oxygenation (like co-oximetry measured arterial oxygen saturation) where hypoxia is a concern.

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婴幼儿脉搏血氧仪的种族和肤色差异
最近,几项基于电子健康记录的大型回顾性队列研究强调了脉搏血氧仪中与种族和皮肤色素有关的不准确性,这些研究涉及不同的患者群体和医疗机构。脉搏血氧仪高估了血氧饱和度,尤其是在缺氧状态下,黑人的血氧饱和度高于其他种族群体。与成人文献相比,儿科研究相对较少,且大多依赖于出生证明或基于母亲种族划分的对比组。新生儿、婴儿和幼儿特别容易受到缺氧和高氧所带来的终生不良后果的影响。成功的新生儿复苏、对以肺部病变为主的早产儿和足月新生儿的精确监测、先天性心脏缺陷筛查,以及家庭供氧、呼吸机支持和药物治疗的关键决策,这些只是高度依赖脉搏血氧仪准确性的几个例子。未被发现的缺氧,尤其是在某些种族群体中存在系统性差异的情况下,可能会延误适当的治疗,并可能进一步延续医疗保健差异。需要进一步评估不同种族群体之间可能存在差异的生物因素的作用,特别是可能导致脉搏血氧仪读数偏差的皮肤色素沉着。皮肤生理和色素的发育和成熟变化及其与脉搏血氧仪操作原理的相互作用也需要进一步研究。重要的是,临床医生应认识到脉搏血氧仪的局限性,并在缺氧问题令人担忧时使用其他客观的氧饱和度测量方法(如协同氧饱和度测量动脉血氧饱和度)。
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来源期刊
Paediatric Respiratory Reviews
Paediatric Respiratory Reviews 医学-呼吸系统
CiteScore
12.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
审稿时长
23 days
期刊介绍: Paediatric Respiratory Reviews offers authors the opportunity to submit their own editorials, educational reviews and short communications on topics relevant to paediatric respiratory medicine. These peer reviewed contributions will complement the commissioned reviews which will continue to form an integral part of the journal. Subjects covered include: • Epidemiology • Immunology and cell biology • Physiology • Occupational disorders • The role of allergens and pollutants A particular emphasis is given to the recommendation of "best practice" for primary care physicians and paediatricians. Paediatric Respiratory Reviews is aimed at general paediatricians but it should also be read by specialist paediatric physicians and nurses, respiratory physicians and general practitioners. It is a journal for those who are busy and do not have time to read systematically through literature, but who need to stay up to date in the field of paediatric respiratory and sleep medicine.
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