Delirium Clinical Trial
Official title:
DANish DELIrium Study On Neurointensive Care Patients. A Two Phase Intervention Study
Abstract Background Studies have shown that delirium in medical and surgical intensive care
units (ICUs) increases mortality, length of stay (LOS) as well as the risk of dementia
symptoms and cerebral atrophy after discharge. Only few studies have investigated delirium in
the neurointensive care unit (N-ICU). Delirium is most often assessed by one of two
instruments: Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist (ICDSC) or the Confusion Assessment
Method for the ICU (CAM-ICU).
Aims
1. To measure the effect of a systematic intervention (sedation, sleep, mobilization and
pain) on delirium symptoms in patients with acute acquired brain injury in N-ICU.
2. To validate the ICDSC and CAM-ICU to patients with acute acquired brain injury Method
The design of the study is a two-phase interventional trial. Based on a power
calculation, 56 patients will be enrolled both in the baseline and the intervention
group (n=112).
Part 1: A baseline investigation will be conducted to establish prevalence, duration and type
of delirium symptoms in patients with acute acquired brain injury before implementing the
intervention bundle.
Part 2: A systematic Intervention protocol will be implemented in the N-ICU. The Intervention
elements consist of a sedation, sleep, mobilization and pain treatment regimen based on the
newest available evidence.
Enrolled patients will be contacted 12 months after discharge for a follow-up including a
quality of life with (EuroQoL-5D) questionnaire, a cognitive test measuring their cognitive
end point (Repeatable Battery for Assessment of the Neuropsychological Status) and a short
test for dementia symptoms (MMSE, Mini Mental State Examination).
Background It has been established that in medical and surgical intensive care units (ICUs)
that delirium increases mortality and length of stay (LOS), as well as the risk of dementia
and cerebral atrophy after discharge. There is a lack of studies into delirium in the
neurointensive care unit (N-ICU) population, and no studies have addressed the association
between delirium, quality of life, dementia symptoms and cerebral atrophy in patients with
acquired brain injury after discharge from N-ICU. A recent study has demonstrated a
correlation between delirium symptoms in stroke patients and quality of life, and functional
levels at 3, 6 and 12 months after N-ICU discharge, suggesting that delirium during the acute
phase effects the long-term outcome.
Delirium screening has not been introduced systematically in N-ICUs in Denmark or
internationally, and validated instruments are lacking in this population. The Confusion
Assessment Method for ICU (CAM-ICU) and the Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist
(ICDSC) are internationally most recommended and best validated delirium screening tools for
non-psychiatric health care staff. Neither of the two instruments, however, has been fully
validated in patients with acquired brain injury.
Several studies and guidelines suggest that delirium is potentially preventable by minimizing
sedation, and ensuring systematic pain management, early mobilization and adequate sleep. The
present study therefore aims to investigate if delirium is preventable in an N-ICU setting by
introducing a multi-modal intervention bundle optimizing management of sedation, pain,
mobilization and sleep.
Aim
The primary aim of the study:
To measure the effect of the intervention bundle on prevalence, duration and type of delirium
symptoms using the Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist (ICDSC) and Confusion
Assessment Method for the ICU (CAM-ICU) in N-ICU patients with acute acquired brain injury
Secondary aim: To validate ICDSC and CAM-ICU for adult N-ICU with acute acquired brain
injury, and investigate if delirium symptoms are negatively correlated with quality of life,
cognitive function and dementia symptoms at 12-month follow-up post N-ICU discharge.
Method Study design: A controlled two-phased before-and-after trial. Phase I: Baseline study
(4 months), Phase II: Intervention study (4 months). This design was chosen as the most
appropriate, because a randomized clinical trial would have a large spill-over effect.
The primary outcome is duration of delirium symptoms with ICDSC and CAM-ICU in the N-ICU
based on a hypothesis that it is possible to decrease time with delirium in the N-ICU 20% or
more. Power calculation: 56 patients will be enrolled during a 4-month period, in the
baseline and the intervention group respectively, yielding a total of 112 patients (20%
drop-out rate, 5% significance, 80% power).
Inclusion criteria All Danish speaking adults (18 years or above) with an expected N-ICU
length of stay (LOS) more than 48 hours and admitted with acute brain injury from spontaneous
or traumatic bleeding, such as subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), intracranial hemorrhage (ICH)
or traumatic brain injury (TBI).
Exclusion criteria Patients not expected to survive 48 hours, or continues Richmond
Agitation-Sedation Score (RASS) of -4 or -5 during the stay in the N-ICU.
Data collection Demographics: age, gender, primary diagnosis, marital status and living
situation, education, BMI, and alcohol consumption. Clinical data include: Glasgow Coma Score
(GCS), Richmond Agitation and Sedation Scale (RASS), ICDSC, CAM-ICU, Acute Physiology and
Chronic Health Evaluation II (APACHE II), Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS II),
intubation status, sedation agent and dose, type of mobilization and pain status. Follow-up
includes EuroQoL-5D (EQ-5D), Repeatable Battery for Assessment for the Neuropsychological
Status (RBANS) and Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) questionnaire at 12 months after
discharge.
Phase I Baseline study (4 months). A baseline investigation will be conducted to establish
the prevalence, duration and type of delirium symptoms in patients with acute acquired brain
injury. Usual care will be provided at this time. For validation a psychiatric team will rate
included patients usingThe Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth
Edition (DSM-V) and The International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) as the gold
standard. The psychiatric team assesses patients the first and second day after the patient
has a RASS -2 or above for 24 hours.
Phase II Intervention study (4 months). After full implementation of the intervention bundle,
the study will be conducted to establish the prevalence, duration and type of delirium
symptoms in patients with acute acquired brain injury. The psychiatric team assesses patients
the first and second day after the patient has a RASS -2 or above for 24 hours.
Implementation of intervention An all day workshop introducing the multi-modal intervention
bundle will be held for all nurses in the unit. The study nurses will be specially trained to
maintain study protocol. Physicians will be informed and trained on a weekly morning meeting
during phase II, and some will participate in the all day workshop. Journal audits will be
used as monitoring the implementation. The Intervention bundle consist of a sedation, sleep,
mobilization and pain treatment regimen based on the newest available evidence in the four
areas.
Sedation: Sedatives will be kept to a minimum by daily orders for target RASS sedation level
and titration of sedatives by primary nurse. Dose and agent will be recorded.
Sleep: Sleep will be optimized by systematic use of earplugs at night, dim lighting,
visitation restrictions, and midday rest periods. Procedures (e.g. blood samples) will be
carried out in the day time instead of night time. Hours of activity/rest will be assessed by
an actiwatch (actigraph).
Pain: A strategy of multi-modal pain management combining pharmacological and
non-pharmacological interventions will be implemented. Pain will be assessed by Critical-Care
Pain Observation Tool (CPOT) for unresponsive patients and Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) for
patient-reported pain.
Mobilization: Systematic early mobilization will be implemented by daily orders for
mobilization level and a mobilization guideline.
Follow-up: Follow-up will be conducted on all possible patients in the two study groups at
twelve months post N-ICU discharge. Patients will come to the hospital for the EQ-5D for
self-rated health, RBANS for cognitive function and the MMSE questionnaire for dementia
symptoms.
Ethical considerations The study includes an observational and an interventional part
introducing optimized treatment and care according to current best international evidence.
The intervention items will be implemented in the entire unit as standard care for all
patients. Most patients will be unable to give initial consent to the study due to their
cerebral status. Relatives and general practitioner will be contacted and informed verbally
and in writing to provide consent by proxy. The study is approved by the Regional and
national ethics committees and the Danish Data Protection Agency.
Data analysis Prevalence, type and duration of delirium symptoms in the baseline group will
be compared to the intervention group. Furthermore the two groups will be compared on LOS and
mortality. Patients ICDSC score are compared with EQ-5D, RBANS and MMSE in order to
investigate possible associations between delirium and self-rated health, cognitive function
and dementia.
All data will be coded and plotted in Excel and SPSS for the statistical data analysis.
Hardware and worksheets are handled and stored as prescribed by the Danish Data Protection
Agency. There will be used descriptive and analytical statistics. Categorical variables will
be described as frequency and percent. Continuous variables will be described as mean and
standard deviation (SD). The two groups will be compared by correlation analysis, univariate
and multivariate regression analyzes and questionnaires are analyzed by a paired t-test to
compare the two groups' average score.
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