Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Terminated
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT01137773 |
Other study ID # |
UofL IRB #562.06 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Terminated |
Phase |
Phase 4
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 2007 |
Est. completion date |
December 2015 |
Study information
Verified date |
December 2021 |
Source |
University of Louisville |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Brain injury patients who meet defined criteria will be assigned to intensive insulin
treatment (target blood glucose levels of 10-110 mg/dl) or conventional IV insulin treatment
(target glucose of 150-170 mg/dl). Follow up will occur at 3, 6 and 12 months. The primary
outcome measure will be neurological outcome at 12 months according to Karnofsky Performance
Scale (KPS). A general view of outcome will also be presented as favorable (good recovery+
moderate disability), unfavorable (severely disabled+ vegetative state), and dead.
Secondary outcome measures will be blood glucose levels and death.The investigators will also
record systemic complications like pulmonary emboli, pulmonary edema, myocardial infarction,
ventricular arrhythmias, and pneumonia.
Description:
Demographic data, social and medical histories, and clinical features at onset will be
obtained via patient or family interview shortly after admission . We want to get the
patients enrolled in our protocol as soon as possible because we believe that hyperglycemia
levels greater than 200 mg/dl is a secondary insult that should be prevented as early as
possible. However, a twelve-hour period after ICU admission is necessary for initial
diagnosis and assessment of the patient's status in order to identify the patient as a
potential study subject and to get consent from the patient's legal representative.
Within twelve hours of ICU admission, qualifying patients will be randomized one of the two
groups. Randomization will be based on computer-generated codes that will be maintained in
sequentially numbered opaque envelopes. The randomization will be stratified according to the
severity of neurological injury based on GCS. The three stratification groups will be
GCS=6-8, GCS=9-11 and GCS=12-14. Randomization will be done using random sized blocks within
stratum, and patients will be randomized within stratum to either:
1. Intensive intravenous insulin treatment (Target glucose levels of 80-110 mg/dl)
2. Conventional intravenous insulin treatment (Target glucose levels of 150-170 mg/dl)
All patients in the trial will have blood taken hourly for glucose analysis, regardless of
their designated group. Adjustments of the insulin dose will be based on measurements of
capillary blood glucose level. The interval between the glucose samples will be increased
when patients satisfy discharge criteria from the intensive care unit. The insulin dose
adjustments will be made by a team of intensive care nurses, assisted by a study nurse who is
not otherwise involved in the clinical care of the patients. RBC transfusions, if necessary,
will be administered one unit at a time, and the patient's hemoglobin concentration will be
measured before and after each transfusion.
All patients enrolled in the study will receive saline infusion supplemented with potassium.
An orogastric or nasogastric feeding tube (Dobhoff tube) will be inserted. Enteral feeding
will be started per feeding protocol with the goal of starting on day one. After insertion of
a nasogastric or orogastric tube, tube position will be verified with abdominal x-ray.
Enteral feeding will be instituted with 25 to 30 nonprotein kilocalories per kilogram of body
weight per 24 hours and a balanced composition (including 0.13 to 0.26 g of nitrogen per
kilogram per 24 hours and 20 to 40 percent of nonprotein in the form of lipids). 69 Formula
used will be recorded. Patients will be fed continuously starting at a rate of 25 ml/hour. If
continuous enteral feeding cannot be instituted or has to be stopped and enteral nutrition is
anticipated to be interrupted for more than 7 days, total parenteral nutrition will be
initiated. Patients will be allowed to progress to a regular oral diet after they have passed
a swallowing study.
The underlying neurological conditions will be managed by the neurosurgical team according to
the protocols of the Department of Neurosurgery of the University of Louisville.
When participating patients' physiological statuses have stabilized and the need for ICU
monitoring and care is no longer necessary, they will be discharged to a lower level of care
(in accordance with the 1999 guidelines of Task Force of the American College of Critical
Care Medicine, Society of Critical Care Medicine). Upon discharge from ICU, patients in all
groups will be treated with subcutaneous insulin according to established transition
guidelines.