Critically Ill Clinical Trial
Official title:
Screening Elderly PatieNts For InclusiOn in a Weaning Trial: The SENIOR Trial
Verified date | October 2017 |
Source | St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
During weaning the work of breathing is transferred from the ventilator back to the patient.
Approximately 40% of the time on ventilators is spent weaning. Studies support the use of
screening protocols and tests of patient's ability to breathe spontaneously (SBTs) to
identify weaning candidates. The investigators work demonstrates that once daily screening is
the current standard of care. The conduct of daily ward rounds and once daily screening in
ICUs is poorly aligned with the rapidly changing clinical status of critically ill patients.
With respiratory therapists (RTs) in Canadian intensive care units (ICUs), a significant
opportunity exists to screen patients more often, conduct more SBTs, and reduce the time
spent on ventilators and in the ICU. Only one mechanical ventilation trial has focused on the
elderly and no trial has evaluated weaning outcomes in the elderly and very elderly which may
be influenced by the presence of comorbidities, frailty, malnutrition and treatment
limitations.
The investigators propose to conduct a pilot randomized trial in 100 elderly (>/= 65 years)
critically ill adults comparing 'once daily' screening to 'at least twice daily' screening in
8 adult ICUs. In the proposed trial, the investigators will (i) evaluate their ability to
recruit elderly (>/= 65 years) critically ill patients into a weaning trial and (ii) assess
whether protocols can be adhered to similarly between elderly (65 to 80 years) and very
elderly (>80 years) trial participants. Moreover, they will also address generalizability
issues in the conduct of mechanical ventilation research by evaluating potential biases
associated with exclusion criteria and consent between elderly and very elderly patients and
obtain preliminary estimates of differences in important clinical outcomes between elderly
and very elderly participants.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 102 |
Est. completion date | December 2015 |
Est. primary completion date | December 2015 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 65 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: The investigators will include: 1. elderly (age >/= 65 years) critically ill adults 2. receiving invasive mechanical ventilation for at least 24 hours who can breathe spontaneously on Pressure Support (PS) or trigger breaths on volume or pressure Assist Control (AC), volume or pressure Synchronized Intermittent Mandatory Ventilation (SIMV) ± PS, Pressure Regulated Volume Control (PRVC) or Airway Pressure Release Ventilation (APRV). 3. patients must be receiving </= 70% inspired oxygen 4. and a positive end-expiratory pressure of </= 12 cm H2O (Table 2). . Exclusion Criteria: The investigators will exclude patients who have already undergone extubation or an SBT, are unlikely to benefit (e.g. moribund, expected brain death), on automated weaning modes, participating in studies with a weaning protocol, and those who can not be optimized with regard to sedation and mobilization. Specifically, we will exclude patients: 1. admitted after cardiopulmonary arrest or with brain death or expected brain death, 2. who have evidence of myocardial ischemia in the 24 hour period before enrollment, 3. who have received continuous invasive mechanical ventilation for >/= 2 weeks, 4. who have a tracheostomy in situ at the time of screening, 5. who are receiving sedative infusions for seizures or alcohol withdrawal, 6. who require escalating doses of sedative agents, 7. who are receiving neuromuscular blockers or who have known quadriplegia, paraplegia or 4 limb weakness or paralysis preventing active mobilization (e.g., active range of motion, exercises in bed, sitting at edge of bed, transferring from bed to chair, standing, marching in place, ambulating), 8. who are moribund (e.g., at imminent risk for death) or who have limitations of treatment (e.g., withdrawal of support, do not reintubate order, however, do not resuscitate orders will be permitted), 9. who have profound neurologic deficits (e.g. large intracranial stroke or bleed) or Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) </= 6, 10. who are using modes that automate SBT conduct, 11. who are current enrolled in a confounding study that includes a weaning protocol, 12. who were previously enrolled in this trial, 13. patients who have already undergone an SBT or 14. patients who have already undergone extubation [planned, unplanned (e.g. self, accidental)] during the same ICU admission. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Hamilton General Hospital | Hamilton | Ontario |
Canada | St Joseph's Hospital | Hamilton | Ontario |
Canada | Hôpital Saint-Luc | Montréal | Quebec |
Canada | Ottawa General Hospital | Ottawa | Ontario |
Canada | Universite Hopitalier de Sherbrooke | Sherbrooke | Quebec |
Canada | Mount Sinai Hospital | Toronto | Ontario |
Canada | St. Michael's Hospital | Toronto | Ontario |
Canada | St. Paul's Hospital | Vancouver | British Columbia |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto |
Canada,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Proportion of enrolled elderly and very elderly trial participants | Comparison of the proportions of enrolled elderly and very elderly trial participants. | 12 months | |
Other | Proportion of consents obtained and declined for trial participation | Compare the proportions of consents obtained and declined for trial participation similar between eligible elderly and very elderly trial participants. | 12 months | |
Other | Rates and reasons for trial exclusion | Description of the rates and reasons for trial exclusion based between eligible elderly and very elderly patients. | 12 months | |
Other | Effect of the alternative screening strategies on clinically important outcomes (see below) between elderly and very elderly trial participants? | Compare, in preliminary estimates, the effect of the alternative screening strategies on clinically important outcomes [time to first SBT, time to first successful SBT, time to first extubation and successful extubation, total duration of mechanical ventilation, ICU and hospital length of stay, ICU and hospital mortality, use of noninvasive ventilation (NIV) after extubation and complications rates [reintubation, self-extubation, tracheostomy, prolonged mechanical ventilation > 7d and > 21 d] and adverse event rates between elderly and very elderly trial participants. | 12 months + 2 months follow up | |
Primary | Recruit, on average, 2 elderly invasively ventilated, critically ill patients per ICU per month. | As a feasibility trial, the investigators propose to assess feasibility metrics that reflect their ability to consent, enroll and recruit elderly and very elderly invasively ventilated patients and evaluate adherence to the study protocols in preparation for launching a large scale screening RCT including whether they can recruit invasively ventilated elderly (age >/= 65 years) critically ill adults into a weaning trial comparing the alternative screening strategies. | 12 months | |
Secondary | Adhere to the assigned screening protocols in both study arms. | The investigators will assess whether clinicians can adhere to the assigned screening protocols in both study arms. They will consider compliance rates of at least 80% to be acceptable in both study arms and contamination in the once daily screening arm will be < 10%. | 12 months |
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