Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Enrolling by invitation
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05874102 |
Other study ID # |
22-078 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Enrolling by invitation |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 13, 2023 |
Est. completion date |
December 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
January 2024 |
Source |
Connecticut Children's Medical Center |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Infants are typically fed in a cradled, upright position, however feeding specialists/SLPs
often position infants in a side-lying position to promote safe, quality, and
neurodevelopmentally protective feeding which is supported by currently available literature.
Side-lying position is often recommended by feeding specialists to reduce the risk for
aspiration and improve other components of infant swallow function. However, there is no
literature directly assessing airway protection during the swallow with the infant in the
side-lying versus upright positions. The goal of this study is to conduct an instrumental
assessment (Modified Barium Swallow/Videofluoroscopic Swallow Study) in these different
positions (upright versus side-lying) to determine if there is a difference in airway
compromise. The target population are infants between post-menstrual ages of 38-56 weeks who
are referred for a modified barium swallow study.
Description:
Infants are typically fed in a cradled, upright position. With at-risk infants, feeding
specialists may adopt a side-lying position to promote safe, quality, and
neurodevelopmentally protective feeding. Current literature to support this practice suggests
that side-lying position improves physiologic stability during feeding as compared to the
traditional cradled or upright position. Side-lying position has several theoretical benefits
based on various mechanisms including its similarity to the natural breast-feeding position,
reduced hydrostatic pressure of the bottle when it is held horizontally rather than
vertically above the infant, increased ease of coordinating suck-swallow-breath due to
decreased flow rate, and reduced work of breathing. Another possible reason that side-lying
position is beneficial is improved swallow function including decreased incidence of
penetration or aspiration, which is the term for food or liquid entering the airway.
Aspiration can have devastating effects on infants, particularly premature infants, including
respiratory illnesses, need for increased respiratory support, inability to maintain
nutrition orally, long term lung damage, and even death. Side-lying position is often
recommended by feeding specialists to reduce the risk for aspiration and improve other
components of infant swallow function. However, there is no literature directly assessing
airway protection during the swallow with the infant in the side-lying versus upright
positions.
Modified Barium Swallow Studies (MBS) are considered gold standard evaluations of swallowing
function and are used to determine the safest bottle-feeding plan for medically-complex
infants. MBS performed on infants typically assess multiple parameters, including
suck-swallow-breathe coordination and sequencing, pharyngeal residue, timing of swallow
initiation, upper esophageal sphincter opening, and presence of penetration (material
entering the airway but remaining above the vocal folds) or aspiration (material entering the
airway and passing below the vocal folds into the trachea). These studies have traditionally
been completed in the upright/cradled position, despite the use of side-lying position
clinically. However, this practice is changing, as some clinicians use side-lying during MBS
to improve swallow safety and therefore inform feeding recommendations. This study aims to
investigate whether there are changes in swallow function of infants fed in side-lying vs
upright position during MBS. MBS will be analyzed to assess infant swallow function in
side-lying position compared with swallow function in upright position. The following swallow
parameters will be analyzed comparatively by position: airway invasion as defined by
penetration and aspiration; location of the bolus at the time of swallow initiation, and
suck-swallow-breathe coordination.
Previous literature suggests that infants fed in side-lying position are better able to
control bolus rate and direction of flow than when they are fed in an upright/cradled
position; however, these studies use physiologic outcomes and do not actually confirm if this
hypothesized benefit is true. Pilot data found that infants were better able to protect their
airway during the pharyngeal swallow, as evidenced by reduced rates of penetration or
aspiration. Penetration is defined as material entering the airway during feeding but
remaining above the vocal folds, whereas aspiration denotes material passing below the vocal
folds towards the lungs, as measured by the Penetration-Aspiration Scale.
Side-lying position is hypothesized to reduce flow rate of liquid from the oral cavity into
the pharynx, allowing the infant increased time to initiate the swallow and protect the
airway. Previous literature suggests that infants fed in side-lying position are better able
to control bolus rate and direction of flow than when they are fed in an upright/cradled
position, leading to swallow initiation with the bolus higher in the pharyngeal cavity.
Previous research suggests that infants fed in side-lying position demonstrate improved
oxygenation, which may be due to the infants' ease of coordinating breathing and swallowing
during feeding. Suck-swallow-breathe coordination may be easier when fed in side-lying
position because of the reduced gravitational pull of the liquid into the infant's mouth, and
the increased ability to control the flow rate. Pilot data revealed that infants demonstrated
fewer swallows per breath when fed in a side-lying position, which may indicate a more
coordinated swallow-respiration sequence.
Pilot data revealed that airway invasion (penetration and aspiration) was statistically
significantly reduced, location of the bolus at time of swallow initiation was statistically
significantly higher, and number of swallows per breaths were statistically significantly
lower when infants were fed in a side-lying position compared to an upright/cradled position.
That pilot investigation validates the need for additional research to further define the
mechanisms related to this improvement, and to determine how diagnosis and medical stability
moderate these findings.
If findings support that side-lying position decreases aspiration risk, it updates the
standard of care for feeding, especially for at-risk infants who are not able to undergo
instrumental swallow testing. Side-lying is a no-cost strategy with the potential to enhance
infant and caregiver quality of life through safe and developmentally appropriate nutritional
intake. Conversely, if results indicate side-lying increases swallowing risk in certain
populations, this is also significant and directs the standard of care for hospitals that
routinely advise side-lying in the absence of instrumental swallow testing. This work informs
best practices for clinical practitioners (e.g., SLP, RN, MD, etc.) and infant caregivers
(i.e., parents) to minimize the risk of aspiration and its possible health consequences.