A new noninvasive finger sensor (NICCI system) for cardiac output monitoring: A method comparison study in patients after cardiac surgery

Eur J Anaesthesiol. 2022 Aug 1;39(8):695-700. doi: 10.1097/EJA.0000000000001705. Epub 2022 Jul 5.

Abstract

Background: The new noninvasive finger sensor system NICCI (Getinge; Gothenburg, Sweden) allows continuous cardiac output monitoring. We aimed to investigate its cardiac output measurement performance.

Objectives: To investigate the NICCI system's cardiac output measurement performance.

Design: Prospective method comparison study.

Setting: University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.

Patients: Fifty-one patients after cardiac surgery.

Main outcome measures: We performed a method comparison study in 51 patients after cardiac surgery to compare NICCI cardiac output (CO NICCI ) and NICCI cardiac output calibrated to pulmonary artery thermodilution cardiac output measurement (CO NICCI-CAL ) with pulmonary artery thermodilution cardiac output (CO PAT ). As a secondary analysis we also compared CNAP cardiac output (CO CNAP ) and externally calibrated CNAP cardiac output (CO CNAP-CAL ) with CO PAT .

Results: We analysed 299 cardiac output measurement pairs. The mean of the differences (95% limits of agreement) between CO NICCI and CO PAT was 0.6 (-1.8 to 3.1) l min -1 with a percentage error of 48%. The mean of the differences between CO NICCI-CAL and CO PAT was -0.4 (-1.9 to 1.1) l min -1 with a percentage error of 29%. The mean of the differences between CO CNAP and CO PAT was 1.0 (-1.8 to 3.8) l min -1 with a percentage error of 53%. The mean of the differences between CO CNAP-CAL and CO PAT was -0.2 (-2.0 to 1.6) l min -1 with a percentage error of 35%.

Conclusion: The agreement between CO NICCI and CO PAT is not clinically acceptable.

Trial registration: The study was registered in the German Clinical Trial Register (DRKS00023189) after inclusion of the first patient on October 2, 2020.

MeSH terms

  • Cardiac Output
  • Cardiac Surgical Procedures* / methods
  • Humans
  • Monitoring, Physiologic / methods
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Thermodilution* / methods