Impact of Racial Differences in Hypoxia Distribution on the Measured Prevalence of Occult Hypoxemia by Pulse Oximeters

Rama A. Salhi MD, MHS, MSc , Valeria S.M. Valbuena MD , Ashraf Fawzy MD, MPH , Sarah M. Seelye PhD , Theodore J. Iwashyna MD, PhD
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Abstract

Background

Racial differences in pulse oximeter accuracy increasingly have become recognized. However, previously published literature has not examined the extent to which underlying racial differences in levels of hypoxemia, such as those arising from differential testing, disease recognition, and treatment, may confound previously observed differences in pulse oximetry measurement.

Research Question

The presented study examined the extent to which underlying differences in arterial oxygen saturation (Sao2) drive previously observed racial differences in pulse oximetry occult hypoxemia measurement.

Study Design and Methods

Analysis was completed as a secondary data analysis of two existing databases. Data were reanalyzed from the previously published Veterans Affairs (VA) Patient Database (2013-2019) and the Extracorporeal Life Support Organization (ELSO) registry (2019-2020). Patients included general ward and critically ill patients. We compared the measured burden of occult hypoxemia (ie, Sao2 < 88%, with peripheral capillary oxygen saturation ≥ 92%) when standardizing for population-level distributions of Sao2 vs when standardizing the sensitivity at each Sao2.

Results

Black patients showed a higher likelihood of occult hypoxemia when compared with White patients in both data sources (Veterans Affairs Patient Database, 18.8% vs 14.9%; Extracorporeal Life Support Organization registry, 14.6% vs 7.0%). The distribution of Sao2, to an extent, does change the measured occult hypoxemia rates; however, large racial differences were persistent after standardizing based on underlying Sao2 distributions.

Interpretation

Underlying differences in Sao2 distributions were observed in the analyzed data. Such differences point to ongoing differentials in care; however, even when accounting for Sao2 distributions, differential detection of hypoxemia by race persisted in pulse oximeters in contemporary use.

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低氧分布的种族差异对脉搏血氧仪测量的隐蔽性低氧血症患病率的影响
背景脉搏血氧仪准确性的种族差异越来越得到认可。然而,先前发表的文献尚未研究低氧血症水平的潜在种族差异,如差异检测、疾病识别和治疗引起的差异,在多大程度上可能混淆先前观察到的脉搏血氧计测量差异。研究问题本研究检查了动脉血氧饱和度(Sao2)驱动的潜在差异在多大程度上先前在脉搏血氧计隐性低氧血症测量中观察到的种族差异。研究设计和方法分析是作为对两个现有数据库的二次数据分析完成的。数据来自之前公布的退伍军人事务(VA)患者数据库(2013-2019)和体外生命支持组织(ELSO)登记处(2019-2020)。患者包括普通病房和危重症患者。我们比较了在标准化Sao2人群水平分布时与在标准化每个Sao2的灵敏度时测量的隐匿性低氧血症负担(即Sao2<;88%,外周毛细血管血氧饱和度≥92%)(退伍军人事务患者数据库,18.8%vs 14.9%;体外生命支持组织登记,14.6%vs 7.0%)。Sao2的分布在一定程度上确实改变了测量的隐性低氧血症率;然而,在基于潜在的Sao2分布进行标准化后,巨大的种族差异仍然存在。解释在分析的数据中观察到Sao2分布的潜在差异。这些差异表明了护理方面的持续差异;然而,即使考虑到Sao2的分布,在当代使用的脉搏血氧计中,种族对低氧血症的差异检测仍然存在。
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CHEST critical care
CHEST critical care Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine, Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
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