Magnetic Resonance Imaging Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Use of a Mock MRI Scanner for Reducing the Use of Anesthesia in Children Undergoing Clinical MRI Scans
Diagnostic Magnetic Resonance (MR) imaging procedures can be stressful for children and
parents. Patients must lie still during the procedure to provide diagnostic quality images.
Children <7 years are often sedated or given general anesthesia (GA) for imaging procedures.
The high cost of GA and its associated risks motivate the search for alternatives. The
overall goal of this study is to systematically investigate whether training on the mock MR
scanner reduces the need for GA during Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans in children.
160 participants scheduled for diagnostic MRI scans at Alberta Children's Hospital (ACH) will
be recruited to undergo different training methods for MRI scanning. Group 1 will be sent
links to online videos about MRI, audio files with scanner noises, and a children's book
about MR scans, to prepare at home. Group 2 will receive training materials and visit the ACH
to review them with the research team, but will not use the mock scanner. Group 3 will
receive training materials and visit the ACH for training on the mock MR scanner. Visits to
the mock scanner for Group 3 will include practice lying down, staying still, wearing
headphones, and watching a movie on the mirror system. During and after training sessions,
the investigators will collect data on total time spent preparing (mock scanner or other),
the child's feelings of stress/worry before and after visit, and head motion during mock MRI
session (if applicable).
Subjects will be scheduled for a clinical scan without GA and a follow-up clinical scan with
GA (to be cancelled if the first scan is successful). Scan success will be determined by a
radiologist. Measures of scan success, quality ratings for each scan, children's feelings of
stress/worry related to the MRI, and saliva samples to measure cortisol and salivary alpha
amylase, will be gathered at the clinical scan. An ANOVA will be used to compare different
training groups.
A clinical group of 35 neuro-oncology patients aged 3-7 years of age that undergo frequent
MRI scans will also undergo staged preparation by child life specialists using the mock
scanner. The age at which they are able to complete MRI without general anesthesia will be
compared with a retrospective control group in the 3 years prior. Measures to be used for
this group are the same (with the exception of saliva samples). T test and Kaplan- Meier
analysis will be used to compare age at which MRI can be performed awake.
Diagnostic MR procedures can be scary and stressful for children and parents. Because
patients must lie still during the procedure to provide diagnostic quality images, young
children (typically <7 years) and others not expected to comply are often sedated or given
general anesthesia (GA) for imaging procedures. However, the high cost of GA and its
associated risks motivate the search for alternatives. Previous reports demonstrate that
preparation (including using a mock MR scanner) reduces anxiety and increases compliance for
clinical and research MRI procedures without GA. However, systematic studies of the
advantages of a mock MR scanner versus other training methods are lacking. Furthermore, while
reducing the use of GA is desirable, repeated unsuccessful scanning procedures are also
costly, so identifying factors that predict success for diagnostic MR procedures is important
to effectively allocate resources.
Aims
The overall goal of this study is to systematically investigate whether training on the mock
MR scanner reduces the need for GA during MRI scans in children. There are three specific
aims:
1. Determine whether pre-scan training allows children to have successful diagnostic MRI
scans without general anesthesia.
2. Examine the effects of different types of pre-scan training on reducing anxiety and
stress in children and their parents related to diagnostic MRI.
3. Determine whether mock scanner training can lower the age at which neuro-oncology
patients are able to complete a full diagnostic MRI without anesthesia compared with
historic controls.
Patient name, date of birth, and hospital identification number are necessary to perform
chart review and access diagnostic images. All identifying information will be removed prior
to data analysis.
The following data will be collected/recorded for each participant at enrollment:
1. Study number
2. Sex
3. Age at time of scan(s)
4. Type of diagnostic scans requested
5. Parent report on overall stress
6. Parent proxy measures of child stress/worry (PedsQL)
7. Parent predictions of child success on MRI
8. (Aim 3 only) Primary Oncology Diagnosis: i) Site ii) Histology
9. (Aim 3 only) Treatment mode i) Surgery ii) Chemotherapy iii) Radiotherapy
Training Sessions
For Aims 1 and 2, participants will be randomly assigned to one of three training groups.
Group 1 will be sent links to online videos about MRI, audio files with scanner noises, and a
children's book about MR scans, to prepare at home. Group 2 will receive training materials
and visit the ACH to review them with the research team, but will not use the mock scanner.
Group 3 will receive training materials and visit the ACH for training on the mock MR
scanner. Visits to the mock scanner for Group 3 will include practice lying down, staying
still, wearing headphones, and watching a movie on the mirror system. The Child Life
Specialist will talk with the child and his/her family about the experience, and allow them
up to 1 hour of practice time on the mock scanner.
For Aim 3, all participants will receive training on the mock scanner similar to group 3 with
the difference being Child Life Specialists will utilize a goal based preparation of 3 X 20
minute sessions to coincide with other visits to the hospital.
All participants will be booked for one MR scan without GA and one with GA a week later in
case the first scan fails.
The following data will be collected during/after training sessions:
1. Total time spent preparing (mock scanner or other)
2. Child's feelings of stress/worry before and after visit (PedsQL)
3. Head motion during mock MRI session (if applicable)
Diagnostic MRI Sessions
The following information will be recorded for each child's MRI scan:
1. Date of MRI.
2. Child's age at time of scanning.
3. Scan success without anesthesia (pass/fail)
4. Number of sequences requiring repeating
5. Total scan length (mins)
6. Sum of individual scan sequence times (mins)
7. Quality of images, as determined by a pediatric neuro-radiologist and graded as
Excellent (no motion artifact ), Good (minimal motion artifact ); Acceptable (motion
artifact; but satisfactory to answer the clinical question); Unacceptable (significant
motion artifact ; unable to answer the clinical question)
8. Parent proxy measures of child stress ( PedsQL )
9. Child's stress/worry (PedsQL)
10. (Aims 1 and 2) Saliva sample to measure cortical and salivary alpha amylase before and
after diagnostic MR scan
If images are deemed suitable for clinical diagnosis, the subsequent GA booking will be
cancelled.
No raw images will be retained for any patients outside of their hospital record.
For Aim 3 prospective data, the above information will be recorded at each scanning session
until the patient is able to complete the entire scan without anesthesia.
For Aim 3 retrospective data: The patient's hospital identification number will be used to
identify MRI scans performed on that patient in the 3 years prior to the study. The MRI
report will be cross referenced with the department of anesthesia electronic database to
determine the date and thereby the age at which MRI without GA was able to be performed. In
the case where the MRI report states that scan was performed under GA but no electronic
record of GA is present the paper chart will be reviewed to determine if GA was performed. If
The MRI scan report does not specify that GA was performed and an anesthesia record for the
MRI exists then scan will be considered to have been performed under GA.
Statistical Plan
An ANOVA will be used to evaluate group differences on scanning success measures. Additional
analyses will focus on correlations between scan successes and age, sex, measures of
child/parent stress, cortisone, salivary alpha amylase, and training session compliance.
Aim 3 will also explicitly test differences in the mean age in months at which neuro-oncology
patients were able to successfully complete the diagnostic MRI without anesthesia in the
groups with and without mock scanner training. These will be compared utilizing T-test and
Kaplan-Meier Analysis.
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