Abstract
We assessed agreement in haemoglobin measurement between Masimo pulse co-oximeters (Rad-7™ and Pronto-7™) and HemoCue® photometers (201+ or B-Hemoglobin) with laboratory-based determination and identified 39 relevant studies (2915 patients in Masimo group and 3084 patients in HemoCue group). In the Masimo group, the overall mean difference was-0.03 g/dl (95% prediction interval-0.30 to 0.23) and 95% limits of agreement-3.0 to 2.9 g/dl compared to 0.08 g/dl (95% prediction interval-0.04 to 0.20) and 95% limits of agreement-1.3 to 1.4 g/dl in the HemoCue group. Only B-Hemoglobin exhibited bias (0.53, 95% prediction interval 0.27 to 0.78). The overall standard deviation of difference was larger (1.42 g/dl versus 0.64 g/dl) for Masimo pulse co-oximeters compared to HemoCue photometers. Masimo devices and HemoCue 201+ both provide an unbiased, pooled estimate of laboratory haemoglobin. However, Masimo devices have lower precision and wider 95% limits of agreement than HemoCue devices. Clinicians should carefully consider these limits of agreement before basing transfusion or other clinical decisions on these point-of-care measurements alone.
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Hiscock, R., Kumar, D., & Simmons, S. W. (2015). Systematic review and meta-analysis of method comparison studies of Masimo pulse co-oximeters (Radical-7TM or Pronto-7TM) and HemoCue® absorption spectrometers (B-Hemoglobin or 201+) with laboratory haemoglobin estimation. Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, 43(3), 341–350. https://doi.org/10.1177/0310057x1504300310
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