Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03745209 |
Other study ID # |
6023923 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 21, 2019 |
Est. completion date |
June 21, 2019 |
Study information
Verified date |
February 2019 |
Source |
Queen's University |
Contact |
Mohammed R ALshamsi, MD |
Phone |
3433333986 |
Email |
17mras[@]queensu.ca |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This is a randomized controlled single-center study that will be conducted in the intensive
care unit. The main objective of this study is to assess the success rate of
ultrasound-guided peripheral intravenous cannulation in ICU patients with difficult
intravenous access compared with traditional landmark technique.
Description:
Peripheral IV access is common and essential procedure conducted by nurses in intensive care
departments. This important procedure is frequently difficult because of the high prevalence
of peripheral edema and obesity among ICU patients. In this study, the investigators will
assess the success rate of real-time ultrasound guidance in cannulating difficult access ICU
patients. This is a randomized controlled single-site trial with two groups in a parallel
design. In this study, the investigators will compare the success rate of ultrasound-guided
peripheral intravenous access (experimental group) to a traditional landmark approach
(control group) in patients with difficult IV access. It is a non-blinded study because of
the nature of the intervention. This study will be conducted in the adult intensive care unit
of Kingston general hospital which is an urban university teaching hospital with 33 ICU beds
and more than 1000 ICU admissions per year. A sample of ICU patients with difficult
cannulation will be selected and enrolled in this study. Difficult cannulation is defined as
poorly visible and poorly palpable upper extremities veins due to any cause after two failed
attempts using the traditional technique. All consecutive patient with difficult cannulation
will be assessed for enrolment in this study starting from October 2018 till March 2019. A
research assistant will be available for patient enrollment and data collection between 8:00
AM to 5:00 PM during regular working hours.
The study will be conducted in two phases. Phase 1 will involve education and training of a
cohort of nurses to perform US-guided cannulation. Experienced ICU nurses with two years of
experience will be recruited to participate in the study. All nurses will have no prior
experience in ultrasound-guided peripheral I.V insertion prior to this study. Education
consists of didactic 2 hours lecture and hands-on practice on synthetic training models (
blue phantoms). This will cover basic machine operation, image optimization, sonographic
anatomy and ultrasound techniques for guiding peripheral I.V cannulation. This will be
followed by 2-3 months observation period during which nurses have to perform at least 15
successful ultrasound-guided peripheral cannulations on live subjects before actual patients'
enrolment. Phase 2 will involve enrolment of difficult peripheral access ICU patients meeting
specific inclusion and exclusion criteria. Patients will be systematically randomized to the
ultrasound-guided or the landmark technique using envelop randomization.
Only upper limb veins will be selected for cannulation. All the cannulation will be done
under semi aseptic technique as per standard placement and cleaning procedures for peripheral
IV access. Ultrasound-guided cannulation will be performed using sterile gel for the
procedure and the ultrasound probe will be covered with sterile adhesive films (e.g., 3M
Tegaderm). Two already available departmental ultrasound machines (sonosite edge) will be
used for this study. High-frequency probe (5-10 MHz) with single operator out of plane (short
access) approach will be used for ultrasound-guided cannulation. When using ultrasound for
I.V placement, veins deeper than 1.5 cm from the skin surface and veins with a diameter of
less than 0.3 cm will be avoided because of high failure rate and increased risk of
extravasation. Catheter length and size will be selected based on the depth and size of the
veins to ensure that a sufficient portion of the catheter will remain in the vessel to
prevent early failure.
Intensive care nurses participating in the study will record all the data related to outcome
measures on a preprinted data collection forms.The Investigators will enter the raw data into
SPSS software for analysis. An intention-to-treat analysis will be performed. Using the power
of 80% and alpha of 0.05, the sample size was calculated to be 25 per group. Categorical
variables such as success rate, catheter survival rate and complication rate will be
presented as a percentage and will be compared using Fisher exact tests. Continuous variables
such as insertion time and the number of attempts will be shown as mean, median (with
interquartile ranges), and 95% confidence interval (CI) and will be compared using
Mann-Whitney U tests. All statistical analysis will be conducted using IBM SPSS Base 25 for
Windows.