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Point‐of‐care measurement of fetal blood lactate – Time to trust a new device
Author(s) -
Wang Mandy,
Chua Seng C.,
Bouhadir Lilain,
Treadwell Erin L.,
Gibbs Emma,
McGee Therese M.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
australian and new zealand journal of obstetrics and gynaecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.734
H-Index - 65
eISSN - 1479-828X
pISSN - 0004-8666
DOI - 10.1111/ajo.12671
Subject(s) - medicine , venous blood , blood lactate , arterial blood , lactic acid , umbilical artery , anesthesia , fetus , blood pressure , pregnancy , heart rate , biology , bacteria , genetics
Background Point‐of‐care lactate devices are used worldwide for intrapartum decision making. Current practice is often based on Lactate Pro (Arkray) but its imminent product discontinuation necessitates determination of an optimal replacement device. Aims To evaluate the performance of Lactate Pro and two other point‐of‐care devices, Lactate Pro 2 (Arkray) and StatStrip (Nova Biomedical), and to derive scalp lactate cut‐offs equivalent to the current intervention trigger of >4.8 mmol/L. Materials and methods Paired umbilical cord arterial and venous blood samples from 109 births were tested on the three point‐of‐care products (two devices each), cross‐compared with the reference method blood gas analyser. Results All brands deviate from the blood gas analyser, with Lactate Pro and StatStrip results consistently lower and Lactate Pro 2 consistently higher. Standard deviation from the blood gas analyser was smallest for StatStrip (0.78 mmol/L, cord artery), and largest for Lactate Pro 2 (1.03 mmol/L, cord artery). Within‐brand variation exists and is similar for all brands (mean absolute difference on cord artery 0.23–0.30 mmol/L). Equivalent values to the 4.8 mmol/L intervention threshold based on Lactate Pro are 4.9–5.0 mmol/L for StatStrip and 5.3–5.9 mmol/L for Lactate Pro 2, calculated by receiver‐operating characteristic analysis. Conclusions StatStrip appears superior to Lactate Pro 2 to replace the original Lactate Pro. Using StatStrip, the 4.8 mmol/L intervention threshold equivalent was 4.9–5.0 mmol/L. The variation in accuracy of point‐of‐care lactate devices may exceed the small increments (eg <4.2 mmol/L vs >4.8 mmol/L) that guide obstetric decisions.