Trans-abdominal Fetal Pulse Oximetry; Tissue Light Scattering and Signal Integrity
- Conditions
- Fetal Hypoxia
- Interventions
- Device: GEN 3 Monitoring of Fetus
- Registration Number
- NCT04876846
- Lead Sponsor
- Raydiant Oximetry, Inc.
- Brief Summary
The overall purpose of this study is to evaluate maternal-fetal tissue light scattering properties. The objectives of the study are: (i) integrate established mathematical principles of oxygen saturation to model with increasing accuracy the "body in a body" problem of fetus in mother; similar to existing pulse oximeters, the calculations will be integrated into software in the final commercial product; (ii) obtain human measurements against which both computational models and animal data can be compared.
- Detailed Description
This is a prospective, observational, non-significant risk study. The study involves using non-invasive devices that measure fetal depth and tissue light scattering on the maternal abdomen. Ultrasound assessment will be performed, and five images taken at the locations indicated on Figure 1. Depth to fetus will be recorded along with measurement of all distinctive layers. All images will be captured with minimal probe pressure applied to allow accurate ascertainment of depth. Images will be anonymized, and all study data will be coded with a unique identifier. Key maternal descriptive statistics will be recorded from the medical record including BMI, height, weight (kg), parity, age and gestational age. The ISS device is a customized commercial frequency domain oximeter (Imagent, ISS Inc.; http://www.iss.com/biomedical/instruments/imagent.html) with multiple laser sources and multiple detectors. This instrument is safe, uses non-ionizing radiation. The Raydiant Oximetry Sensing System (ROSS) device is a non-invasive fetal pulse oximeter that measures fetal arterial oxygen saturation using safe, non-invasive, transabdominal near-infrared spectroscopy. The combination of these two devices makes up the Raydiant Oximetry GEN 3 device. This GEN 3 device will be positioned on the maternal abdomen of women volunteers in the late 3rd trimester. This sensor will measure light scattering and absorption for a period of about 10-20 minutes. A second measurement may be obtained for an additional site on the maternal abdomen. The Sponsor anticipates this study will require about 6-12 months to enroll all study subjects at all study sites, and another month to complete primary analyses.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- Female
- Target Recruitment
- 10
- Women with singleton, healthy pregnancy at gestational age ≥ 36 weeks
- Age > 18 years
- Willing to come in for testing outside of routine business hours (including Saturdays)
- Age <18
- Multiple gestation (twins, triplets)
- Presentation other than vertex or breech
- < 36 weeks of gestation
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Interventional/Observational GEN 3 Monitoring of Fetus The Gen 3 device will be positioned on the maternal abdomen to measure light scattering and absorption for a period of about 10-20 minutes. A second measurement may be obtained for a total of up to 40 minutes. Subject's end their participation in the study after that time period.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Fetal Signal After 36 weeks of pregnancy Correlation of the fetal doppler signal with the ROSS device optional fetal signal.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Yaron Friedman, MD, Inc.
🇺🇸Walnut Creek, California, United States