Congenital Heart Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Optical Coherence Tomography Angiography (OCTA) to Assess Cardiac Output and Cerebral Perfusion at the Time of Children's Cardiac Surgery
Around 3500 children including 1,000 babies a year in the UK require heart surgery. Open-heart repairs involve the heart being stopped, while blood is pumped around the body using a cardiopulmonary bypass machine. Following complex operations, the patient may temporarily develop poor heart function, leading to reduced organ blood supply. Low heart output leads to post-operative complications or even death. The current methods to assess cardiac output and to see if vital organs, especially the brain, are receiving enough blood flow, are indirect and can be inaccurate. If we find a better way to detect and then avert or ameliorate periods of poor cardiac output and / or reduced brain perfusion, then this would be helpful for clinicians and could lead to better outcomes for children. We believe that optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA), a non-invasive way to image the blood vessels in the retina at the back of the eye, could help us to assess cardiac output and brain perfusion. The OCTA machine was approved for use in humans in 2019 and given a CE Marking, but it has previously been used mainly in the management of eye diseases. There is a small amount of experience with its use in critically ill adults. We plan a pilot study to see if it is possible to use the OCTA machine at key time points, before, during and after children's heart operations, in 30 patients. We will study the images taken with OCTA machine to see if they are of good quality and we will analyze the images to see whether or not the expected changes in cardiac output and brain perfusion that occur with heart surgery can be detected as changes in blood flow in the back of the eye. Depending on the success of this pilot, we will plan further studies.
• OBJECTIVES 1. To undertake a pilot study in young children undergoing cardiothoracic surgery to treat congenital heart disease involving cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) at Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children (GOSH) in which OCTA images will be collected. 2. To evaluate any practical barriers to acquiring OCTA images from children around the time of their heart surgery at GOSH, ensuring that the conduct of the anaesthetic and surgery are not disturbed. 3. To process and review de identified OCTA images to see whether or not they provide potentially meaningful clinical data about peri-operative changes in cardiac output and cerebral perfusion for children undergoing surgery with CPB. • HYPOTHESES 1. It is feasible to use OCTA to obtain images that can be used to examine regional neuronal microcirculation and better understand peri-operative cerebral blood flow at stages before, during and immediately after cardiopulmonary bypass. 2. There will be detectable, reproducible changes in OCTA readings at different states; pre-CPB, during and post-CPB and that these changes will be reflective of cerebral blood flow at these times. A future hypothesis that will not be tested in this pilot study, but could be tested in a later evaluation study: OCTA monitoring peri-operatively may lead to better, earlier diagnosis of reduced cardiac output and of impairments to the cerebral circulation in the peri-operative period related to surgery for CHD. This will then enable better individualized approaches to CPB strategy and postoperative care, with potential for patient benefit. • RECRUITMENT Participants for inclusion in the study will be identified in advance by reviewing the list of patients scheduled for cardiac surgery requiring cardiopulmonary bypass available from the cardiac theatre coordinator. Their eligibility will be confirmed by the absence of exclusion criteria and ensuring the participant meets all inclusion criteria. When the patient and parent(s) attend their pre-cardiac surgical assessment clinic, they will be given a patient information leaflet and if they express interest, they will be given an opportunity to discuss participation in the study. If a child is an inpatient prior to surgery then this will occur on the cardiology ward. Informed consent will be taken either in the pre-cardiac surgical assessment day case unit or the cardiology ward. • RESEARCH SUBJECT CONFIDENTIALITY Patient confidentiality will be of utmost importance during data collection, and we will make every effort to protect the privacy of each research subject. We will not collect nor hold patient identifiers and we will collect the minimum clinically important information about each patient necessary to complete the study objectives. - DRUG INFORMATION The research entails the administration of a licensed medication for the purposes of the research, and not for clinical benefit. The licensed medication is eye drops, of a type that are licensed for use in this age group and are routinely used to examine the back of the eye (the fundus of the eye) by eye specialists. I) TROPICAMIDE The study will use Minims tropicamide drops (Bausch & Lomb UK Limited); a topical mydriatic and cycloplegic agent used to dilate the pupil and temporarily paralyse the lens 20 minutes before eye examination. This is needed so that the images of the fundus of the eye can be obtained. The duration of effect is 60-90 minutes and up to 6 hours. We will only examine one of the two eyes and will make the clinical care team fully aware of which eye we are studying. DOSE - We will use the standard clinical paediatric dosing regimen per the British National Formulary for Children. II) PHENYLEPHRINE EYE DROPS Drug information Minimis Phenylephrine Hydrochloride 2.5% w/v eye drops. DOSE -We will use the standard clinical paediatric dosing regimen per the British National Formulary for Children. • OCTA EQUIPMENT The study entails the use of a CE marked device which has been used extensively to image the eyes of children and adults, but not in the setting of paediatric cardiac surgery. • DATA PROCESSING AND STORAGE OCTA images and other pseudonymized study data will be stored with patient study ID only and no identifying information. Images will be reviewed for quality. Images at different time points will be reviewed for evidence of change. Study data will be held for up to three years after the end of the study. • FOLLOW-UP Patients and their families will be contacted when they are in the ward and the child has recovered, just before they are discharged from hospital for a brief follow-up interview about any post-procedure adverse events or feedback about participation. At this time, we will ask the parent and the child for feedback about participating in the research. We will ask whether or not they have noticed any visual symptoms or eye irritation. • STATISTICS We anticipate that in our initial studies we may generate images of inferior quality and as such we need a sufficient sample size to accommodate a 'learning curve'. Image quality analysis - this metric is an integer between 1 and 200 provided by the OCTA machine internal software, which will be grouped as poor, medium or good based on the OCTA software. Vessel density is a % between 0-100, again provided by the OCTA internal software, the vessel density at the study timepoints will be used to look for evidence of change. Once we have learned how to acquire clinically usable images within the setting of children's heart surgery, we will then set out to compare images at the three time points to look for evidence of change. We have included a sample size of 30 as a reasonable number likely to see us through a learning phase through to providing sufficient good quality images for at least two time points such that we can detect a change of at least 15% flow reduction from pre-operative time point and the later time points. • ADVERSE EVENT REPORTING The primary investigators accept responsibility of reporting adverse events by completing an Adverse Event (AE) form including information on the seriousness of the adverse event, assessing whether or not it is a direct consequence of the research study and proposing any further action. The primary investigators are aware of and accept the responsibility of the adverse event reporting requirements of investigators as well as timelines for reporting as defined in the Research Ethics Board Adverse Event Reporting Requirements. All serious, unexpected adverse drug reactions to the study medication will be reported to the MHRA through the Yellow Card Scheme within 15 calendar days or for death or life-threatening events, within 7 calendar days. In the latter case, a follow-up report must be filed within 8 calendar days. • DATA SAFETY MONITORING The Data Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB) will be responsible for oversight of data and safety. The DSMB for this study will be chaired by Mr Nigel Drury Cardiothoracic Surgeon and Clinical Trials expert Birmingham Children's Hospital ;
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