Questa pagina è stata tradotta automaticamente e l'accuratezza della traduzione non è garantita. Si prega di fare riferimento al Versione inglese per un testo di partenza.

Monitoraggio della Pressione Arteriosa con Guaina a Sensore di Pressione Rispetto ai Metodi Tradizionali nelle Procedure Interventistiche

20 novembre 2025 aggiornato da: Yibin Fang, Shanghai Fourth People's Hospital Tongji University

Valutazione dell'Accuratezza e della Sicurezza del Monitoraggio della Pressione Sanguigna mediante Guaina Sensibile alla Pressione rispetto al Monitoraggio Tradizionale Invasivo e Non Invasivo della Pressione Sanguigna nelle Procedure Interventistiche: Uno Studio Prospettico, Monocentrico, Randomizzato e Autocontrollato

Questo studio osservazionale mira a valutare l'accuratezza e la sicurezza del monitoraggio della pressione arteriosa mediante catetere con sensore di pressione rispetto ai metodi tradizionali di monitoraggio invasivo e non invasivo durante le procedure interventistiche neuroendovascolari.

Lo studio arruolerà 50 pazienti adulti sottoposti a procedure neuroendovascolari elettive che richiedono anestesia generale e monitoraggio continuo invasivo della pressione arteriosa. La pressione arteriosa sarà misurata simultaneamente utilizzando tre metodi: (1) catetere con sensore di pressione, (2) cateterismo arterioso radiale e (3) monitoraggio non invasivo con bracciale.

L'esito primario è l'accuratezza delle misurazioni della pressione arteriosa dal catetere con sensore di pressione rispetto alle misurazioni del cateterismo arterioso radiale. Gli esiti secondari includono l'incidenza di complicanze nel sito di accesso, la durata della procedura, i punteggi di comfort del paziente e l'analisi di costo-efficacia.

Questo studio prospettico, monocentrico sarà condotto presso lo Shanghai Fourth People's Hospital Affiliato alla Tongji University da agosto 2025 a maggio 2027.

Panoramica dello studio

Descrizione dettagliata

  • Detailed Description for ClinicalTrials.gov Registration

    • BACKGROUND

      • Current State of Blood Pressure Monitoring in Interventional Procedures

Real-time, accurate hemodynamic monitoring is crucial during various interventional procedures. Currently, the clinical "gold standard" for continuous invasive arterial blood pressure monitoring is achieved through peripheral arterial catheterization (typically radial artery) connected to a pressure transducer, known as Radial Artery Catheterization (RAC). Although RAC provides beat-to-beat blood pressure data, it has several inherent limitations.

First, RAC insertion is an additional invasive procedure requiring extra time and technical skill, potentially delaying the start of the primary procedure. Studies have shown that RAC insertion requires an average of 10.7 minutes of additional time, with delays exceeding 80 minutes possible in complex cases. Second, the catheterization process may cause patient discomfort; research indicates that approximately 31.6% of patients experience pain after RAC insertion, with about 30% finding the pain bothersome. Additionally, RAC is associated with various potential complications, including radial artery occlusion (incidence approximately 5.5%), hand ischemia, infection, and thrombosis.

As an alternative, non-invasive blood pressure (NIBP) monitoring is widely used due to its convenience and safety. However, NIBP provides only intermittent readings and may fail to capture critical blood pressure fluctuations in rapidly changing hemodynamic scenarios. This is particularly important in neurointerventional procedures, where real-time blood pressure monitoring is essential for preventing and managing complications such as vasospasm and thrombosis.

### Pressure Sensing Sheath Technology

Given the limitations of traditional monitoring methods, pressure sensing sheath technology has emerged as an innovative blood pressure monitoring approach. This technology integrates a miniature pressure sensor within the vascular access sheath, enabling continuous invasive blood pressure monitoring while establishing vascular access. Theoretically, this approach can simultaneously address the time consumption, patient discomfort, and monitoring discontinuity associated with traditional methods.

Internationally, pressure sensing sheath technology, represented by EndoPhys Corporation, has received U.S. FDA 510(k) clearance and entered clinical use. Purdy et al. first published accuracy validation research on pressure sensing sheath technology in 2017. Froehler et al. completed the first prospective controlled trial (Clinical Trial Registration Number: NCT03239847) in 2018, initially confirming the clinical value of this technology in neurointerventional procedures. However, existing studies are primarily single-center, small-sample investigations focused mainly on European and American populations, with a lack of randomized controlled trial evidence.

### Study Rationale and Innovation

#### Filling Evidence Gaps

Currently, there is a lack of high-quality prospective randomized controlled trial evidence to systematically verify whether pressure sensing sheath monitoring is non-inferior to the gold standard RAC in accuracy, and to comprehensively compare safety, procedural efficiency, and patient-physician satisfaction. Existing international studies have relatively small sample sizes (20-40 cases), and their external validity and generalizability require further verification.

  • Establishing Standards for Chinese Population

Vascular anatomical structures and hemodynamic characteristics show certain racial differences. Vascular diameter, elasticity, and blood pressure variability patterns in the Chinese population may differ from those in European and American populations. This study will be the first to systematically evaluate the accuracy and safety of pressure sensing sheath technology in a Chinese population, providing scientific evidence for establishing application standards and operational specifications suitable for Chinese clinical practice.

  • STUDY OBJECTIVES

    • Primary Objective To assess the non-inferiority of the pressure sensing sheath blood pressure monitoring system compared to traditional radial arterial line invasive blood pressure monitoring combined with standard blood pressure cuff monitoring in terms of blood pressure reading accuracy during interventional procedures.
    • Secondary Objectives - To compare the safety of two monitoring methods

      - To evaluate procedural efficiency and operational convenience

      - To analyze patient comfort

  • STUDY HYPOTHESIS

    • Primary Hypothesis The pressure sensing sheath monitoring system is non-inferior to traditional radial arterial line invasive blood pressure monitoring in measuring mean arterial pressure accuracy during interventional procedures, with the 95% limits of agreement between the two methods within the clinically acceptable range (±10 mmHg).
    • Secondary Hypothesis Pressure sensing sheath monitoring is superior to or equivalent to traditional radial arterial line monitoring in terms of safety, procedural efficiency, and patient comfort.
  • STUDY DESIGN

This is a prospective, single-center, self-controlled randomized, non-inferiority clinical study.

The study will enroll patients undergoing elective transradial interventional procedures requiring continuous invasive blood pressure monitoring (meeting inclusion criteria without exclusion criteria). Using a self-controlled randomized design, each patient will simultaneously receive both pressure sensing sheath blood pressure monitoring (experimental group) and traditional radial arterial line invasive blood pressure monitoring combined with standard blood pressure cuff monitoring (control group). The primary study endpoint is at 7 days. By synchronously comparing the performance of both monitoring methods in the same patient, individual differences are eliminated, demonstrating that pressure sensing sheath monitoring is non-inferior to traditional radial arterial line invasive blood pressure monitoring systems, thereby providing a superior monitoring option for clinical practice.

### Randomization Scheme

Laterality Randomization: A random sequence will be generated to randomly determine whether the pressure sensing sheath monitoring system is inserted into the left or right radial artery, with the control group monitoring system inserted into the contralateral radial artery.

Monitoring Time Point Randomization: Block randomization design will be used to randomly determine specific blood pressure measurement time points within preset monitoring time windows, ensuring time synchronization and randomness of monitoring for both groups.

Experimental Group: Pressure sensing sheath monitoring system (inserted via radial artery)

Control Group: Traditional radial arterial line invasive blood pressure monitoring system combined with standard blood pressure cuff monitoring

---

## STUDY POPULATION

  • Data Source This study's data will be collected from Shanghai Fourth People's Hospital Affiliated to Tongji University using a prospective, single-center data collection approach. Study subjects will be patients aged ≥18 years scheduled to undergo elective transradial interventional procedures requiring continuous invasive blood pressure monitoring according to standard medical operational procedures. Data collection period will be from September 15, 2025, to May 31, 2027, with an anticipated enrollment of 50 patients meeting inclusion criteria.
  • Diagnostic Criteria

This study primarily targets patients requiring transradial interventional procedures with continuous invasive blood pressure monitoring. Disease diagnostic criteria include:

Indications for Interventional Procedures: According to relevant clinical guidelines and expert consensus, diseases requiring transradial interventional treatment primarily include acute cerebral infarction, aneurysms, arteriovenous malformations, carotid artery stenosis, and other cerebrovascular diseases. Specific diagnostic criteria reference the latest cerebrovascular disease diagnosis and treatment guidelines, including comprehensive evaluation of clinical symptoms, imaging examinations (CT/CTA/MRI/MRA/DSA), and laboratory test results.

Indications for Continuous Invasive Blood Pressure Monitoring: According to clinical needs and standard medical operational procedures, patients requiring radial arterial catheterization for invasive blood pressure monitoring include: interventional procedure patients requiring real-time, accurate blood pressure monitoring to guide treatment; patients with potentially unstable hemodynamics requiring close monitoring; patients requiring precise blood pressure control during procedures to prevent complications.

  • Inclusion Criteria

    • Age ≥18 years
    • Patients scheduled for elective transradial interventional procedures requiring continuous invasive blood pressure monitoring
    • Patients who must undergo radial arterial catheterization for invasive blood pressure monitoring according to clinical needs and standard medical operational procedures
    • Patients who can understand the study purpose, voluntarily participate and sign informed consent, and are willing to undergo relevant examinations and clinical follow-up
  • Exclusion Criteria

    • Patients with contraindications to radial artery access
    • Patients with hemodynamic instability
    • Patients requiring postoperative continuous invasive blood pressure monitoring
    • Patients unable to provide informed consent
    • Patients with known severe aortic or subclavian artery stenosis or occlusion
    • Patients with severe coagulation dysfunction (INR ≥2.0, platelet count <75×10⁹/L)
    • BMI >40 kg/m²
    • Severe heart failure (NYHA Class IV) or patients requiring emergency rescue with hemodynamic instability
  • Withdrawal Criteria

    • Symptom deterioration or clinical complications preventing scheduled procedure
    • Subject wishes to pursue non-protocol treatment
    • Subject voluntarily withdraws from the study for any reason

      • STUDY ENDPOINTS
  • Primary Endpoint

Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP) Agreement Analysis:

  • Bland-Altman method to analyze agreement between pressure sensing sheath monitoring and radial artery monitoring
  • Calculate 95% limits of agreement
  • Evaluate mean and standard deviation of differences between the two methods
  • Non-inferiority criterion: 95% limits of agreement within ±10 mmHg
  • Synchronously evaluate agreement between pressure sensing sheath monitoring and standard blood pressure cuff monitoring as a reference comparison

    • Secondary Endpoints

Secondary Efficacy Endpoints:

  1. Systolic (SYS) and Diastolic (DIA) Blood Pressure Agreement Analysis:

    - Separate Bland-Altman analysis for SYS and DIA

    • Calculate Pearson correlation coefficient and Lin's concordance correlation coefficient
    • Evaluate systematic bias and proportional bias
  2. Blood Pressure Waveform Analysis:

    - Waveform morphology comparison (upstroke slope, downstroke characteristics, etc.)

    • Pulse pressure variability analysis
    • Waveform quality scoring (signal-to-noise ratio, artifact degree)
  3. Procedural Efficiency Indicators:

    • Procedure preparation time: Time from patient entering operating room to start of radial artery puncture
    • Monitoring establishment time: Time from puncture initiation to obtaining stable blood pressure waveform
    • Impact on total procedure time

      • Safety Endpoints

Secondary Safety Endpoints:

  1. Intraoperative Complications (intraoperative visit):

    • Puncture-related immediate complications: vasospasm or dissection, hematoma
    • Puncture failure rate
    • Significant hemodynamic changes
  2. Postoperative Complications within 24 Hours:

    - Puncture site-related early complications: delayed bleeding, hematoma, vasospasm or dissection, vascular occlusion

    • Abnormal puncture site healing
    • Radial artery patency abnormalities (palpation, ultrasound)
  3. Short-term Follow-up Complications (7 days post-procedure):

    - Puncture site delayed complications: infection, vascular occlusion, pseudoaneurysm

    • Persistent neurological impairment
    • Long-term radial artery patency (palpation, ultrasound)
  4. Patient-Reported Outcome Measures:

    - Puncture site pain score (VAS 0-10 points)

    - Impact on daily activities

    ---

    ## STUDY PROCEDURES

    ### Visit Schedule

    The study consists of 4 visits: Visit 1 (enrollment visit), Visit 2 (intraoperative visit), Visit 3 (24 hours post-procedure), and Visit 4 (7 days post-procedure). All visits are clinical follow-ups.

    • Visit 1 (Enrollment Visit)

      - Informed consent

      - Demographic characteristics: name, gender, age, height, weight, body mass index, smoking history, drinking history, family history, hypertension, diabetes history, peripheral artery disease history, cerebrovascular disease history, coronary heart disease history, PCI history, dyslipidemia history, liver disease, kidney disease history, coagulation dysfunction history, neurological disease history, clinical manifestations (acute cerebral infarction, aneurysm, arteriovenous malformation, carotid artery stenosis, etc.)

      - Clinical indicators: blood pressure, heart rate, complete blood count, coagulation function, liver function, kidney function, electrolytes, blood glucose, electrocardiogram, cranial imaging (CT/CTA/MRI/MRA/DSA), carotid ultrasound, etc.

      - Concomitant treatments

      - Determine if inclusion criteria are met and if exclusion criteria exist; if patient qualifies, randomization will be performed and appropriate treatment strategy assigned

    • Visit 2 (Intraoperative Visit)

      - Patient symptoms

      - Concomitant treatments

      - Endpoint events and adverse events: puncture-related complications (vasospasm, hematoma formation, pseudoaneurysm, thrombosis, infection), blood pressure monitoring equipment failure, puncture failure, local pain, and others

      - Synchronous blood pressure monitoring data collection: MAP, SYS, DIA, and blood pressure waveform data from both pressure sensing sheath monitoring and traditional radial arterial line invasive blood pressure monitoring, as well as standard blood pressure cuff monitoring comparison data

      - Procedural efficiency indicators: procedure preparation time (time from patient entering operating room to main procedure start), total time required to establish stable invasive blood pressure monitoring, puncture success rate

      - Operator satisfaction score and patient comfort assessment

    • Visit 3 (24 Hours Post-Procedure) and Visit 4 (7 Days Post-Procedure)

      • Patient symptoms
      • Concomitant treatments
      • Endpoint events and adverse events: puncture site-related complications (delayed bleeding, hematoma, infection, vascular occlusion, pseudoaneurysm formation, neurological impairment), thrombotic events, and others
      • Safety assessment: puncture site healing status, radial artery patency examination (palpation, ultrasound), signs of local infection, neurological function assessment, patient-reported puncture site pain and discomfort scores (VAS score) (Visits 3 and 4)

        • DATA MANAGEMENT
    • Data Governance

    The study employs prospective data collection at 4 predetermined visit time points: Visit 1 (enrollment), Visit 2 (intraoperative), Visit 3 (24 hours post-procedure), and Visit 4 (7 days post-procedure). Standardized Case Report Form (CRF) templates ensure data collection consistency and completeness. Intraoperative blood pressure monitoring data will be synchronously collected to ensure temporal matching between pressure sensing sheath monitoring and traditional radial arterial line invasive blood pressure monitoring.

    ### Data Management Plan

    Detailed standard operating procedures for data collection will be established, clearly defining data collection content and requirements for each visit time point. For primary endpoint data, double data entry will be employed to ensure data accuracy. Data collection checklists will be established to ensure important data items are not missed. For blood pressure monitoring data, strict synchronous measurement standards will be established to ensure both monitoring methods are measured at the same time points under identical conditions.

    Multiple levels of data quality control measures will be implemented. Real-time data monitoring systems will validate and quality-check intraoperative blood pressure monitoring data. Data quality checkpoints will regularly verify completeness, accuracy, and consistency, with timely identification and correction of missing or abnormal data. Data anomaly identification and processing workflows will verify and correct abnormal data promptly. Source data verification mechanisms will ensure consistency between CRF data and source documents, guaranteeing data authenticity and traceability.

    ---

    ## BIAS CONSIDERATIONS

    This study fully considers various potential biases and control measures during design and implementation. To control information bias, the study employs standardized equipment calibration to reduce measurement errors, with all pressure monitoring equipment calibrated before use to ensure measurement accuracy, and standardized training to ensure data collection consistency. For selection bias, subjects are screened strictly according to inclusion and exclusion criteria to ensure study population homogeneity, with comprehensive follow-up plans to minimize loss to follow-up and detailed recording of reasons for incomplete visits.

    Confounding bias control is a key feature of this study, employing a self-controlled randomized design where each patient simultaneously receives both blood pressure monitoring strategies. By synchronously comparing the performance of both monitoring methods in the same patient, individual differences are effectively eliminated. Additionally, synchronous measurement of blood pressure data from both monitoring methods during the procedure eliminates the impact of temporal factors on results. To avoid outcome-driven bias, the study protocol predefines the primary endpoint analysis method as Bland-Altman agreement analysis, with non-inferiority criterion set as 95% limits of agreement within ±10 mmHg, avoiding post-hoc selection of the most favorable analysis method.

    ---

    ## STATISTICAL ANALYSIS PLAN

    ### Sample Size Estimation

    The target sample size for this study is 50 cases. This sample size was not determined through statistical calculation but was comprehensively considered based on relevant literature and study design characteristics. According to FDA guidance on medical device clinical trials, non-inferiority studies evaluating medical device accuracy can have relatively small sample sizes when using self-controlled designs.

    Referring to previous research on pressure sensing sheath technology, Purdy et al.'s 2017 accuracy validation study enrolled 20 patients, and Froehler et al.'s 2018 prospective controlled trial (Clinical Trial Registration Number: NCT03239847) enrolled 40 patients, both confirming the clinical value of this technology. Based on sample size requirements for Bland-Altman agreement analysis, relevant statistical literature recommends a minimum of 30-50 samples for methodological comparison studies to obtain reliable agreement assessment results.

    Since this study employs a self-controlled randomized design where each patient simultaneously receives both blood pressure monitoring strategies as their own control, individual variation is effectively eliminated, providing higher statistical power compared to traditional independent sample designs. Considering single-center study feasibility, expected study duration, and enrollment rate of interventional procedure patients, 50 cases can both meet statistical requirements and have good operability. This sample size references conventions from international similar medical device accuracy assessment studies and can provide sufficient evidence support for the primary study endpoint.

    ### Data Set Definitions

    According to study design and analysis objectives, the following data sets are defined:

    Efficacy Analysis Set: All subjects meeting inclusion criteria, without exclusion criteria, who complete synchronous intraoperative blood pressure monitoring. This data set is used for primary endpoint and secondary efficacy endpoint analysis.

    Safety Analysis Set: All subjects receiving at least one blood pressure monitoring method, used for safety endpoint analysis, including monitoring-related complication incidence and patient-reported puncture site pain and discomfort scores.

    If the target population for analysis is a subset of the data set, subsets will be marked as corresponding target populations for subgroup analysis based on different blood pressure ranges or procedure types.

    ### Missing Data Handling

    This study employs prospective design with strict visit arrangements and data quality control measures to minimize data missingness. Primary analysis uses complete case analysis, analyzing only subjects with complete paired blood pressure monitoring data to ensure synchronous measurement data completeness and comparability.

    For subjects with missed visits, investigators will record in detail reasons for incomplete visits and make efforts to obtain other relevant information from subjects. For lost-to-follow-up subjects, available clinical data or vital signs will continue to be collected from interventional centers, referring hospitals, general practitioners, etc., according to protocol. Lost-to-follow-up subjects will not be replaced. Sensitivity analysis will employ different missing data handling methods for comparison, including last observation carried forward, to evaluate the impact of missing data on study conclusions.

    ### Descriptive Analysis

    Comprehensive descriptive analysis will be performed on all collected variables to characterize main variable features. Continuous variables will be described using mean ± standard deviation or median (interquartile range) according to data distribution characteristics. Categorical variables will be described using frequencies and percentages.

    Baseline variable descriptive analysis includes subject demographic characteristics (name, gender, age, height, weight, body mass index), medical history (smoking history, drinking history, family history, hypertension, diabetes history, peripheral artery disease history, cerebrovascular disease history, coronary heart disease history, PCI history, dyslipidemia history, etc.), clinical indicators (blood pressure, heart rate, complete blood count, coagulation function, liver function, kidney function, electrolytes, blood glucose, electrocardiogram), imaging examination results, and concomitant treatment status. Endpoint variables including blood pressure monitoring data, procedural efficiency indicators, and safety events will also undergo corresponding descriptive analysis.

    ### Primary Analysis

    Hypotheses:

    - H0: The 95% limits of agreement for MAP differences between pressure sensing sheath monitoring and radial arterial line monitoring exceed ±10 mmHg

    - H1: The 95% limits of agreement for MAP differences between the two methods are within ±10 mmHg

    Primary analysis method employs Bland-Altman agreement analysis, calculating mean and standard deviation of differences between the two methods, creating Bland-Altman scatter plots, calculating 95% limits of agreement, and evaluating fixed and proportional bias. Non-inferiority judgment criterion is 95% limits of agreement within ±10 mmHg.

    Simultaneously, agreement evaluation will calculate Lin's concordance correlation coefficient and Pearson correlation coefficient, and create equivalence plots. As a reference comparison, agreement between pressure sensing sheath monitoring and standard blood pressure cuff monitoring will be synchronously evaluated. Since a self-controlled randomized design is employed where each patient serves as their own control, effectively eliminating inter-individual differences, primary analysis does not require adjustment for confounding factors.

    ### Sensitivity Analysis

    To evaluate study conclusion robustness, multiple sensitivity analyses will be performed, including:

    - Subgroup analysis of different blood pressure ranges, comparing pressure sensing sheath monitoring agreement performance in low, normal, and high blood pressure ranges

    - Comparative analysis of different data set definitions, comparing differences in results between efficacy analysis set and safety analysis set

    - Comparison of different missing data handling methods, evaluating result consistency between complete case analysis and other imputation methods

    - Agreement analysis stratified by measurement time points, evaluating the impact of temporal factors at different procedure stages on blood pressure monitoring agreement

    • Agreement analysis after excluding extreme values, evaluating the impact of outliers on primary conclusions

      • Safety Analysis

    Safety analysis will employ descriptive statistical methods, analyzed according to adverse event definitions and grading (NCI-CTCAE 4.0). Primary analysis focuses on monitoring-related complication incidence, including vasospasm, hematoma, infection, thrombosis, pseudoaneurysm, etc., as well as patient-reported puncture site pain and discomfort scores (VAS score).

    Complication incidence and severity will be analyzed by visit time point, including intraoperative complications (puncture-related immediate complications, puncture failure rate, significant hemodynamic changes), postoperative complications within 24 hours (delayed bleeding, hematoma, vasospasm or dissection, vascular occlusion, abnormal puncture site healing), and short-term follow-up complications (7 days post-procedure: infection, vascular occlusion, pseudoaneurysm, persistent neurological impairment).

    Safety event analysis will use frequencies and percentages for description. When necessary, Fisher's exact test or McNemar's test (for paired data) will be used to compare differences in monitoring method-related complication incidence.

    ---

    ## QUALITY CONTROL

    Quality control objectives for this study align with ICH guidelines, ensuring scientific validity, completeness, accuracy, and traceability of study data, with particular attention to quality control of blood pressure monitoring data precision and synchronization.

    ### Personnel Training

    All medical staff participating in the study will receive standardized training in pressure sensing sheath monitoring equipment operation to ensure operational consistency and accuracy. Training content includes: pressure sensing sheath monitoring system operational procedures, standard operations for traditional radial arterial line blood pressure monitoring, standardized data collection processes, adverse event identification and reporting, and study protocol requirements and procedures.

    Training will employ a combination of theoretical instruction and practical operation to ensure all research personnel proficiently master equipment operation skills, with effectiveness confirmed through assessment.

    ### Data Quality Control

    A comprehensive data quality control system will be established with regular data quality checks to ensure data completeness and accuracy. Real-time data monitoring will record and validate intraoperative blood pressure monitoring data in real-time, ensuring data collection accuracy and completeness. Data completeness checks will regularly verify completeness and logical consistency, promptly identifying and correcting missing or abnormal data. Data consistency verification will compare data consistency across different visit time points, ensuring data continuity and reliability. Key data validation will perform double verification of primary endpoint data, ensuring core data accuracy. Source data verification will ensure consistency between data and source documents, guaranteeing data authenticity and traceability.

    ### Equipment Calibration

    All pressure monitoring equipment must be calibrated before use to ensure measurement accuracy meets study requirements. Equipment standardization employs uniformly specified monitoring equipment to ensure consistent equipment performance. Regular calibration according to equipment manual requirements calibrates pressure transducers regularly, establishing equipment calibration archives. Calibration records detail each calibration time, results, and operator, ensuring calibration process traceability. Equipment maintenance ensures all monitoring equipment is in good working condition, with regular equipment maintenance and upkeep, and timely handling of equipment failures.

    ---

    ## ETHICS AND REGULATORY CONSIDERATIONS

    • Ethics Committee Review

    This protocol, written informed consent form, and materials directly related to subjects must be submitted to the Ethics Committee and receive written Ethics Committee approval before formally commencing the study. Investigators must submit continuing review reports one month before ethics approval letter expiration to apply for approval extension.

    Upon study suspension and/or completion, investigators must notify the Ethics Committee in writing. Investigators must promptly report all changes occurring in study work to the Ethics Committee (such as protocol and/or informed consent form amendments), and must not implement these changes without Ethics Committee approval, unless the changes are made to eliminate obvious and immediate risks to subjects. In such cases, the Ethics Committee will be notified.

    ### Informed Consent

    Investigators must provide subjects or their legal representatives with an easily understandable Ethics Committee-approved informed consent form and allow subjects or their legal representatives sufficient time to consider the study. Subjects may not be enrolled before obtaining signed written informed consent from subjects. During subject participation, subjects will be provided with all updated versions of informed consent forms and written information. Informed consent forms should be retained as important clinical trial documents for inspection.

    ### Confidentiality Measures

    Results from this project research may be published in medical journals, but personal information will be kept confidential according to legal and regulatory requirements. Unless required by relevant laws, patient personal information will not be disclosed. When necessary, government regulatory authorities, hospital ethics committees, and related personnel may inspect patient data according to regulations.

    ---

    • STUDY TIMELINE

    Study Period: September 15, 2025 to May 31, 2027

    Estimated Timeline:

    - Patient enrollment and data collection: September 2025 - December 2026

    • Data analysis and manuscript preparation: January 2027 - May 2027
    • Final report completion: May 2027

      • SIGNIFICANCE

    This will be the first prospective, self-controlled randomized trial in a Chinese population to systematically evaluate pressure sensing sheath blood pressure monitoring technology. Results will provide high-quality evidence for clinical application of this innovative monitoring technology, potentially improving blood pressure monitoring in interventional procedures, reducing patient discomfort and complications, and improving procedural efficiency. If non-inferiority is confirmed, this technology could become an important alternative for blood pressure monitoring in interventional procedures.

Tipo di studio

Osservativo

Iscrizione (Stimato)

50

Contatti e Sedi

Questa sezione fornisce i recapiti di coloro che conducono lo studio e informazioni su dove viene condotto lo studio.

Contatto studio

  • Nome: Yibin Fang, MD, PhD
  • Numero di telefono: +86 13585831041
  • Email: fangyibin@163.com

Luoghi di studio

    • Shanghai Municipality
      • Shanghai, Shanghai Municipality, Cina
        • Reclutamento
        • Shanghai Fourth People's Hospital Tongji University
        • Contatto:

Criteri di partecipazione

I ricercatori cercano persone che corrispondano a una certa descrizione, chiamata criteri di ammissibilità. Alcuni esempi di questi criteri sono le condizioni generali di salute di una persona o trattamenti precedenti.

Criteri di ammissibilità

Età idonea allo studio

  • Adulto
  • Adulto più anziano

Accetta volontari sani

No

Metodo di campionamento

Campione non probabilistico

Popolazione di studio

Pazienti adulti (≥18 anni) sottoposti a procedure interventistiche neuroendovascolari elettive che richiedono anestesia generale e monitoraggio continuo invasivo della pressione arteriosa presso il Shanghai Fourth People's Hospital Affiliato alla Tongji University. Il reclutamento target è di 50 pazienti da settembre 2025 a dicembre 2026.

Descrizione

Criteri di inclusione:

  • Età ≥18 anni
  • Pazienti programmati per procedure interventistiche transfemoriali elettive che richiedono monitoraggio continuo della pressione arteriosa invasiva
  • Pazienti che devono sottoporsi a cateterizzazione arteriosa radiale per il monitoraggio invasivo della pressione arteriosa secondo necessità cliniche e procedure operative mediche standard
  • Pazienti che possono comprendere lo scopo dello studio, partecipare volontariamente e firmare il consenso informato, e sono disposti a sottoporsi a esami rilevanti e follow-up clinico

Criteri di esclusione:

  • Controindicazioni all'accesso arterioso radiale
  • Instabilità emodinamica
  • Pazienti che richiedono monitoraggio continuo postoperatorio della pressione arteriosa invasiva
  • Mancato ottenimento del consenso informato
  • Stenosi o occlusione aortica o dell'arteria succlavia grave nota
  • Grave disfunzione della coagulazione (INR ≥2.0, conta piastrinica <75×10⁹/L)
  • BMI >40 kg/m²
  • Scompenso cardiaco grave (Classe NYHA IV) o pazienti che richiedono soccorso d'emergenza con instabilità emodinamica

Piano di studio

Questa sezione fornisce i dettagli del piano di studio, compreso il modo in cui lo studio è progettato e ciò che lo studio sta misurando.

Come è strutturato lo studio?

Dettagli di progettazione

Coorti e interventi

Gruppo / Coorte
Intervento / Trattamento
Tutti i Partecipanti
Tutti i pazienti arruolati riceveranno un monitoraggio simultaneo della pressione arteriosa utilizzando entrambi i metodi: (1) Sistema di monitoraggio con guaina sensore di pressione inserita tramite l'arteria radiale, e (2) Monitoraggio tradizionale con linea arteriosa radiale sul lato controlaterale combinato con il monitoraggio standard non invasivo mediante bracciale. Questo è uno studio a disegno autocontrollato in cui ciascun paziente funge da controllo di se stesso.
Monitoraggio continuo invasivo della pressione arteriosa tramite guaina sensibile alla pressione inserita attraverso l'arteria radiale durante la procedura interventistica. La guaina sensibile alla pressione integra un minuscolo sensore di pressione all'interno della guaina di accesso vascolare, consentendo l'accesso vascolare simultaneo e il monitoraggio continuo della pressione arteriosa.
Monitoraggio invasivo tradizionale della pressione arteriosa tramite cateterismo arterioso radiale (RAC) sull'arteria radiale controlaterale, combinato con il monitoraggio standard non invasivo tramite bracciale per la pressione arteriosa. Questo serve come comparatore gold standard per l'accuratezza della misurazione della pressione arteriosa.

Cosa sta misurando lo studio?

Misure di risultato primarie

Misura del risultato
Misura Descrizione
Lasso di tempo
Concordanza della Pressione Arteriosa Media tra Catetere a Sensore di Pressione e Linea Arteriosa Radiale
Lasso di tempo: Intraoperatorio (durata della procedura, circa 1-4 ore)
Analisi di concordanza delle misurazioni della pressione arteriosa media (MAP) tra il monitoraggio con guaina sensibile alla pressione e il monitoraggio con linea arteriosa radiale utilizzando il metodo di Bland-Altman. Criterio di non inferiorità: limiti di concordanza del 95% entro ±10 mmHg. Confronto sincrono di entrambi i metodi nello stesso paziente per eliminare le differenze individuali.
Intraoperatorio (durata della procedura, circa 1-4 ore)

Misure di risultato secondarie

Misura del risultato
Misura Descrizione
Lasso di tempo
Confronto della Pressione Sistolica e Diastolica
Lasso di tempo: Intraoperatorio (durata della procedura, approssimativamente 1-4 ore)
Analisi di Bland-Altman dell'accordo tra i due metodi di monitoraggio per la pressione sistolica (SBP) e diastolica (DBP). Calcola il coefficiente di correlazione di Pearson e il coefficiente di concordanza di correlazione di Lin.
Intraoperatorio (durata della procedura, approssimativamente 1-4 ore)
Efficienza Procedurale
Lasso di tempo: Dal momento dell'ingresso del paziente in sala operatoria fino al completamento della preparazione della procedura (circa 10-30 minuti)
Tempo necessario per stabilire un monitoraggio stabile della pressione arteriosa dall'inizio della puntura, tempo di preparazione della procedura e impatto sulla durata totale della procedura.
Dal momento dell'ingresso del paziente in sala operatoria fino al completamento della preparazione della procedura (circa 10-30 minuti)
Incidenza di Complicanze del Sito di Accesso
Lasso di tempo: Dal momento dell'inizio della procedura fino a 7 giorni dopo la procedura
Composito delle complicanze correlate alla puntura comprendenti: vasospasmo, ematoma, infezione, trombosi, formazione di pseudoaneurisma, occlusione vascolare e compromissione neurologica. Valutato in più momenti: intraoperatorio, 24 ore dopo la procedura e 7 giorni dopo la procedura.
Dal momento dell'inizio della procedura fino a 7 giorni dopo la procedura
Punteggio del Dolore al Sito di Puntura Segnalato dal Paziente
Lasso di tempo: 24 ore e 7 giorni post-procedura
Punteggio del dolore sulla Scala Analogica Visiva (VAS) (0-10 punti) per il fastidio nel sito di puntura e l'impatto sulle attività quotidiane.
24 ore e 7 giorni post-procedura

Collaboratori e investigatori

Qui è dove troverai le persone e le organizzazioni coinvolte in questo studio.

Pubblicazioni e link utili

La persona responsabile dell'inserimento delle informazioni sullo studio fornisce volontariamente queste pubblicazioni. Questi possono riguardare qualsiasi cosa relativa allo studio.

Pubblicazioni generali

Studiare le date dei record

Queste date tengono traccia dell'avanzamento della registrazione dello studio e dell'invio dei risultati di sintesi a ClinicalTrials.gov. I record degli studi e i risultati riportati vengono esaminati dalla National Library of Medicine (NLM) per assicurarsi che soddisfino specifici standard di controllo della qualità prima di essere pubblicati sul sito Web pubblico.

Studia le date principali

Inizio studio (Effettivo)

1 agosto 2025

Completamento primario (Stimato)

31 dicembre 2026

Completamento dello studio (Stimato)

31 maggio 2027

Date di iscrizione allo studio

Primo inviato

20 novembre 2025

Primo inviato che soddisfa i criteri di controllo qualità

20 novembre 2025

Primo Inserito (Effettivo)

2 dicembre 2025

Aggiornamenti dei record di studio

Ultimo aggiornamento pubblicato (Effettivo)

2 dicembre 2025

Ultimo aggiornamento inviato che soddisfa i criteri QC

20 novembre 2025

Ultimo verificato

1 novembre 2025

Maggiori informazioni

Termini relativi a questo studio

Altri numeri di identificazione dello studio

  • ENDO TSP-BP (Altro identificatore: Shanghai Fourth People's Hospital)
  • 2025110-002 (Altro identificatore: Shanghai Fourth People's Hospital Ethics Committee)

Piano per i dati dei singoli partecipanti (IPD)

Hai intenzione di condividere i dati dei singoli partecipanti (IPD)?

NO

Informazioni su farmaci e dispositivi, documenti di studio

Studia un prodotto farmaceutico regolamentato dalla FDA degli Stati Uniti

No

Studia un dispositivo regolamentato dalla FDA degli Stati Uniti

No

Queste informazioni sono state recuperate direttamente dal sito web clinicaltrials.gov senza alcuna modifica. In caso di richieste di modifica, rimozione o aggiornamento dei dettagli dello studio, contattare register@clinicaltrials.gov. Non appena verrà implementata una modifica su clinicaltrials.gov, questa verrà aggiornata automaticamente anche sul nostro sito web .

Prove cliniche su Monitoraggio della pressione sanguigna

Sottoscrivi