Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trial
Official title:
Life-Saving Procedures Performed in the Pre-Decontamination Area While Wearing CBRNe Personal Protective Equipment: A Manikin Randomized Trial
Out-of-hospital care during Chemical-Biological-Radiological-Nuclear-explosive (CBRNe) events
have recently evolved, but the available knowledge is still extremely partial. In particular,
the debate is still ongoing regarding which life-saving maneuvers should be implemented in
the pre-decontamination phase while wearing CBRNe personal protective equipment (PPE). The
investigators hypothesized that PPE may lengthen the execution times and worsen the success
rate of invasive and non-invasive procedures.
This trial involves residents in emergency medicine and anesthesia/critical care of the
University of Padova (Italy) with the following procedures performed on high-fidelity
manikins, after being divided into two groups (wearing and not wearing PPE): positioning of
peripheral venous access; intraosseous access; drug preparation and administration; tension
pneumothorax (PNX) needle decompression; tourniquet positioning; chest compressions. The
primary outcome was the chest compressions depth mean difference between the two groups. As
secondary outcomes, the investigators measured differences between the two groups in: the
percentages of correct release during chest compressions; chest compressions rate (beats per
minute); and the times needed to complete the above-mentioned procedures (other than chest
compressions).
The investigators expect that PPE will reduce CPR quality or delay the completion of the
procedures.
This is a single-center, randomized (1:1), parallel-group, manikin trial comparing times of
execution and quality of life-saving procedures performed by residents while wearing PPE for
CBRNe events versus no PPE. The trial was deemed exempt from review by the local Ethics
Committee (No. 0045954/2019). The study was conducted aiming to reduce carbon footprint and
increase sustainability.
Study Population The trial involves Senior Emergency Medicine (EM) and Anesthesiology and
Critical Care (ACC) residents (PGY-4 and -5) from the residency programs of the University of
Padova (Padova, Italy), recruited via email by the study coordinator (GM) without selection.
Eligible residents are certified as proficient at the procedures described in the next
section by the respective residency board, being this a prerequisite to qualify as a PGY-4
and -5 in Italy. The subjects participating in the study don't receive any incentives.
Written consent is asked prior to the beginning. The study is organized at the "SIMULARTI"
medical simulation center of the University of Padova in Padova, Italy.
Interventions and Procedures Residents are involved in performing the following procedures on
the ground on high fidelity manikins: two rescuers CPR (SUSIE - Gaumard Scientific, Miami,
FL); tactical tourniquet application (with a Combat Application Tourniquet®, CAT Resources,
Rock Hill, SC; on a Trauma Hal - Gaumard Scientific, Miami, FL); tension PNX needle
decompression (Truman Trauma X - TruCorp, Lurgan, N. Ireland); positioning of peripheral
venous access, intraosseous vascular access (with EZ-IO® - Teleflex, Wayne, PA), and drug
preparation and administration (Code Blue III Adult - Gaumard Scientific, Miami, FL). Each
procedure is accomplished by the algorithms collected in an operations manual made available
to the researchers only, and verbally disclosed to the participants before their attempt (see
Online Supplement 1). The participants do not receive any feedback, neither verbal nor
visual, during the execution of the procedures. Subjects in the intervention group wear a
Tyvek pro-tech® "C" gear (Bonetti, Milano, Italy), a full visor SGE 400 mask (EN 136:98 CL3)
connected to an A2B2E2K2-P3 R filter (Spasciani, Milano, Italy), and well-fitting,
non-sterile Mapa Ultranitril 480 gloves (Mapa SAS, Colombes, France). Subjects in the control
group only wear well-fitting, medical examination nitrile gloves.
After the end of the procedures under investigation, participants from the control group are
given the possibility to perform the procedures wearing CBRNe PPE, since this is a training
session part of their curricular activities. Finally, an anonymous questionnaire was
administered to the participants to evaluate their perception of the experience (Online
Supplement 2). The questionnaire was composed of 10 items - 7 positive and 3 negative - that
participants had to rate using a 5 point Likert scale (1=totally disagree; 2=disagree;
3=uncertain; 4=agree; 5=totally agree). The internal consistency of the questionnaire was
measured using Cronbach's alfa.
Randomization For the 1:1 allocation of the residents, a computer-generated list of random
numbers is used. Participants are randomly assigned following variable block sizes of 2 and 4
to either the intervention group (in which they wore CBRNe PPEs) or to a control group (in
which they used only one pair of nitrile gloves) (Figure 1). Also, the participants perform
each procedure in a random order according to a computer-generated sequence. Randomization is
prepared by a researcher not directly involved with the experiments. The allocation of
subjects and order of the procedures are concealed by using sequentially numbered, opaque,
stapled envelopes, and upheld until each participant was in the simulation rooms. The
experiment coordinator (MP) opens the envelopes and assigns participants to group and
procedures. Blinding of participants and researchers involved in the experiment is
unfortunately not possible. Only the outcome assessor and data analyst (SS) is kept blinded
to the allocation.
Outcomes The primary outcome is the difference in sternum to spine chest compressions (CCs)
depth during CPR between the two groups. Secondary outcomes are the differences in CCs
average rates per minute, percentage of CCs full release, times for completion of tourniquet
positioning, PNX decompression, positioning of a peripheral venous catheter and intraosseous
access, and drug preparation and administration. As tertiary outcome, the overall
participants' perception of this CBRNe simulated training at the end of the session is
measured.
Data Collection In each scenario, a researcher collects times with a stopwatch and monitors
the correct execution of procedures. In case of errors, the participant is stopped and
granted a second attempt, but is excluded from the study. As for CPR, data are collected
using UNI® Unified Simulator Control Software ver 2.41.1.0 (Gaumard Scientific, Miami, FL).
Sample Size and Statistical Analysis The investigators calculated that group sample sizes of
18 and 18 would be required to detect a difference of 5.0 mm in CCs depth with a standard
deviation (SD) of 5.0 mm, at a significance level (alpha) of 0.05 and at least 80% power,
using a two-sided Mann-Whitney test, assuming that the actual distribution could be
non-normal. Qualitative data are analyzed descriptively through their distribution frequency.
Quantitative data are tested with a Shapiro-Wilk test for normality. Results are presented as
mean with SD, and differences tested with independent t-test in case of normally distributed
data with equal variance (tested with Levene's test; if not true: Welch test). Otherwise,
results are presented as median and interquartile range (IQR), and differences are tested
using a Mann-Whitney test. All tests are two-sided and p values <0.05 are considered
statistically significant. An estimated difference with 95% confidence interval (CI) is
reported for the difference between testing conditions. Statistical software JASP (ver
0.11.1; JASP Team, 2019) is used to analyze the results.
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