Lessons Learned from Telemonitoring in an Outpatient Bariatric Surgery Pathway-Secondary Outcomes of a Patient Preference Clinical Trial

Elisabeth S. van Ede (Corresponding author), Jai Scheerhoorn, Friso M.J.F. Schonck, Jonna A. van der Stam, Marc P. Buise, Simon W. Nienhuijs, R. Arthur Bouwman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

Background: Remote monitoring is increasingly used to support postoperative care. This study aimed to describe the lessons learned from the use of telemonitoring in an outpatient bariatric surgery pathway. Materials and Methods: Patients were assigned based on their preference to an intervention cohort of same-day discharge after bariatric surgery. In total, 102 patients were monitored continuously for 7 days using a wearable monitoring device with a Continuous and Remote Early Warning Score–based notification protocol (CREWS). Outcome measures included missing data, course of postoperative heart and respiration rate, false positive notification and specificity analysis, and vital sign assessment during teleconsultation. Results: In 14.7% of the patients, data for heart rate was missing for > 8 h. A day-night-rhythm of heart rate and respiration rate reappeared on average on postoperative day 2 with heart rate amplitude increasing after day 3. CREWS notification had a specificity of 98%. Of the 17 notifications, 70% was false positive. Half of them occurred between day 4 and 7 and were accompanied with surrounding reassuring values. Comparable postoperative complaints were encountered between patients with normal and deviated data. Conclusion: Telemonitoring after outpatient bariatric surgery is feasible. It supports clinical decisions, however does not replace nurse or physician care. Although infrequent, the false notification rate was high. We suggested additional contact may not be necessary when notifications occur after restoration of circadian rhythm or when surrounding reassuring vital signs are present. CREWS supports ruling out serious complications, what may reduce in-hospital re-evaluations. Following these lessons learned, increased patients’ comfort and decreased clinical workload could be expected. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov. Identifier: NCT04754893. Graphical Abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2725-2733
Number of pages9
JournalObesity Surgery
Volume33
Issue number9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2023

Funding

This study was initiated from the Eindhoven MedTech Innovation Center (e/MTIC); the project is a collaboration of the Catharina Hospital in Eindhoven, Technical University of Eindhoven, and Philips Research of the Netherlands. The authors wish to thank the Philips research team for their constructive and practical contributions and Philips Healthdot team for technical support during clinical use of Healthdot.

FundersFunder number
Eindhoven MedTech Innovation Center
Eindhoven University of Technology

    Keywords

    • Clinical practice
    • Continuous and remote monitoring
    • Outpatient bariatric surgery
    • Telemonitoring
    • Bariatric Surgery
    • Heart Rate
    • Outpatients
    • Humans
    • Patient Preference
    • Obesity, Morbid/surgery

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