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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Active, not recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02241655
Other study ID # 201407128
Secondary ID 1UH2AG050312-01
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date January 2015
Est. completion date October 2020

Study information

Verified date July 2019
Source Washington University School of Medicine
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This study aims to determine whether, compared with usual anesthetic care, an electroencephalography-guided anesthesia protocol is effective at preventing postoperative delirium and its downstream effects, and improving postoperative patient reported health-related quality of life.


Description:

Delirium is one of several geriatric syndromes, and is among the most common postoperative complications, affecting up to 70% of surgical patients older than 60. Delirium is an acute change that manifests as inattention and inability to think logically, and is deeply distressing to patients and their families. Based on our surveys of 1,000 surgical patients, over 30% were worried about experiencing delirium. Delirious patients are unable to participate effectively in rehabilitation exercises and are susceptible to other geriatric syndromes, like falls. The occurrence and duration of delirium are associated with longer intensive care unit and hospital stay, persistent cognitive deterioration, hospital readmission and increased mortality rate. Additionally, delirium carries a huge social and economic burden, costing over $60,000 per patient per year. Despite the importance of delirium to patients and to society, no approach has been proven to prevent postoperative delirium. Furthermore postoperative delirium is frequently unrecognized, and surgical patients are not followed systematically after they are discharged from hospital. Without diagnosing delirium or following patients postoperatively, we are limited in our ability to test the effectiveness of any intervention to prevent or treat postoperative delirium and its sequelae. There is mounting evidence that electroencephalography guidance of general anesthesia can decrease postoperative delirium. Specifically, our group has found that a suppressed electroencephalogram pattern, which occurs with deep anesthesia, is associated with increased delirium and death after surgery. The Electroencephalography Guidance of Anesthesia to Alleviate Geriatric Syndromes (ENGAGES) Study will therefore compare the effectiveness of two anesthetic protocols for reduction of postoperative delirium. One protocol will be based on current standard anesthetic practice, and the other protocol will be based on electroencephalography guidance. We also expect to determine the impact of the anesthetic protocols on patient reported outcomes of health-related quality of life. At Washington University, we have successfully implemented an ambitious study that enrolls patients at the preoperative assessment clinic, and tracks their health and wellbeing at 30 days and at 1-year postoperatively. This will enable us to assess the consequences of postoperative delirium and to determine whether anesthetic management can impact patient reported outcomes, such as health-related quality of life. We shall also explore whether a multi-component safety intervention for delirious patients prevents downstream adverse events, like falls. The ENGAGES study - through its structured anesthesia protocols, its thorough approach to delirium assessment, and its ability to track patients' health and wellbeing postoperatively - is poised to make a major contribution to the care of elderly patients who are at risk of postoperative delirium and other adverse outcomes.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Active, not recruiting
Enrollment 1400
Est. completion date October 2020
Est. primary completion date May 2018
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 60 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion:

- Patients 60 years old and older,

- Competent to provide informed consent

- Undergoing major elective surgery that requires a minimum stay of 2 days postoperatively (e.g., open cardiac surgery, open thoracic surgery, major vascular surgery, intra-abdominal surgery, open gynecologic surgery, open urologic surgery, major orthopedic surgery, open hepato-biliary surgery and major ear, nose and throat surgery)

Exclusions

- Neurosurgical procedures will be excluded as surgery on the brain can confound the outcome (postoperative delirium).

- Patients with preoperative delirium and patients who are unable to participate adequately in delirium screening including those who are blind, deaf, or illiterate or fluent in languages other than English.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Device:
a pragmatic EEG-guided anesthetic protocol


Locations

Country Name City State
United States Washington University School of Medicine Saint Louis Missouri

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Washington University School of Medicine National Institute on Aging (NIA)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Duration of Delirium Duration will be calculated by the number of positive CAM,CAM-ICU or delirium chart reviews. 5 days
Other Agreements Among the FAM-CAM, Researchers' Delirium Assessments and Patient Perceptions The Family Confusion Assessment Method (FAM-CAM) instrument has previously been shown to have good agreement with the CAM and with DSM-IV diagnostic criteria in patients with cognitive impairment and in hospitalized patients. 5 days
Other Duration or Recurrence of Delirium After Hospital Discharge As measured by the FAM-CAM and patient perceptions 30 days post discharge
Other Clinically Relevant Outcomes Associated With Delirium Delirium incidence, duration and severity have all been shown to be associated with other (downstream) clinically relevant outcomes, including mortality, length of ICU stay, length of hospital stay, falls, cognitive decline and functional decline. 1 year
Other Comparison of Patient-reported and Observational Pain Scores Given that postoperative delirium is common and may relate to uncontrolled pain, this has important implications for the assessment and treatment of postoperative pain. We plan to compare patient reported and behavioral pain assessments in both non-delirious and delirious patients. 5 days
Other Postoperative Actigraphy Postoperative disturbances in sleep abnormalities have previously been associated with postoperative delirium. Measures of root mean-squared activity (RMSactivity) was calculated by combining counts (binned in 1-minute intervals) across all three accelerometer axes (X, Y, and Z) from 16:00 on the day of surgery to 6:00 the following day. Median activity count was calculated from all minutes with nonzero RMS activity within each epoch- higher values indicate more movement. 1 day
Other Relationship Between Clinical CAM-ICU and Rigorous Delirium Assessments Routine clinical (i.e. conducted by ICU nursing staff) delirium assessments in the intensive care units (conducted with the CAM-ICU) will be collected when these are available. Comparison will be made on the outcome of the assessment (positive for delirium or negative by delirium) between these routine clinical assessments and the assessments made by the research team. Since the purpose of this is to determine whether clinical staff are picking up episodes of delirium compared to researcher's assessment in all patients regardless of treatment group, data from both treatment arms were combined for the analysis. 5 days
Other Postoperative Outcomes Hypothesized to be Associated With Anesthetic Depth There is an ongoing randomized, clinical trial investigating the effects of depth of anesthesia on a range of outcomes98, including death, myocardial infarction, cardiac arrest, pulmonary embolus, stroke, surgical site infection, ICU length of stay, hospital length of stay, intraoperative awareness, persistent pain and cancer recurrence. Many of these outcomes are tracked with the SATISFY-SOS study, and will therefore be reported for patients enrolled in the ENGAGES study. 1 year
Other Delirium Prediction Models It is important to improve our understanding of factors that are associated with an increased incidence of postoperative delirium or perhaps may even mediate an elevated risk for postoperative delirium. The arm/group was included in the model to determine if it was associated with postoperative delirium therefore data is not presented by arm/group. 5 days
Other Collaborations With Other Studies The ENGAGES study is being conducted in collaboration with complementary trials at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) (NCT01983384), the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg. Some of the outcomes will be analyzed considering data from some or all of these studies, as appropriate. In terms of the practicality of disseminating the EEG-guided protocol in North America and beyond, it will be important to demonstrate the feasibility and impact of the protocol in multiple sites. 5 years
Other Number of Participants With Severe Delirium The severity of delirium will be scored using the CAM-Severity (CAM-S) metric, which has specifically been shown to be strongly associated with clinically relevant outcomes. Severe delirium was defined as patients with a CAM-S score of 10 or greater (range 0-19). 5 days
Other EEG and Delirium EEG abnormalities have previously been associated with postoperative delirium 5 days
Other Postoperative Actigraphy- Immobile Minutes Postoperative disturbances in sleep abnormalities have previously been associated with postoperative delirium. Measures of root mean-squared activity (RMSactivity) was calculated by combining counts (binned in 1-minute intervals) across all three accelerometer axes (X, Y, and Z) from 16:00 on the day of surgery to 6:00 the following day. We quantified inactivity using the number of immobile minutes, defined as the total number of minutes with an RMSactivity count of zero- higher number indicates patient had more time being immobile. 1 day
Primary Number of Participants With Delirium Delirium will be assessed at baseline and then once a day postoperative for up to 5 days. Patients were assessed for delirium using the Confusion Assessment Method for verbal patients or the Confusion Assessment Method for the Intensive Care Unit for non verbal or intubated patients, and patients medical records were reviewed for evidence of delirium by doctors and nurses assessments. Patients were considered to have delirium by any modality at anytime postoperative day one through five. 5 days
Secondary Postoperative Falls The hypothesis is that the EEG-guided anesthetic protocol and providing a safety intervention will prevent subsequent injurious falls. Falls will be assessed using the Prevention of Falls Network Europe (ProFaNE) questions. At baseline questions will be asked about preoperative falls, and at 30-days and 1-year postoperatively, questions will be asked about postoperative falls. Up to 1 year postoperatively
Secondary Health Related Quality of Life The hypothesis is that the EEG-guided anesthetic protocol will improve postoperative quality of life. Patient self-reported Health-related Quality of Life information will be assessed through the Veteran's RAND 12-item Health Survey at baseline and during follow-up (30-day and 1-year). Up to one year postoperatively
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