Acute Respiratory Failure Requiring Intubation Clinical Trial
— BETAOfficial title:
Bougie Versus Endotracheal Tube Alone on First-attempt Intubation Success in Prehospital Emergency Intubation in Patients Without Predictors of Difficult Intubation (BETA Trial)
Emergency intubation is routinely performed in the prehospital setting. Airway management in the prehospital setting has substantial challenges, such as hostile environment or lack of technical support in case of first attempt intubation failure, and inherent risk of complications, such as hypoxemia, aspiration or oesophageal intubation. This risk is higher when several attempts are needed to succeed endotracheal intubation. Thus, a successful first attempt intubation is highly desirable to avoid adverse intubation-related events. Noteworthy, prehospital emergency intubation is associated with a lower rate of first attempt intubation success when compared to emergency intubation in the emergency department (ED). Research is needed to overcome the specific challenges of airway management in the prehospital setting, and to improve the safety and efficiency of prehospital emergency intubation. Literature reports that the use of assistive devices such as bougie may increase the rate of first-attempt intubation success in the ED. To date, no randomized trial has ever studied this device in the prehospital setting. Thus, the aim of the BETA trial is to compare first attempt intubation success facilitated by the bougie versus the endotracheal tube alone in the prehospital setting.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 710 |
Est. completion date | March 31, 2027 |
Est. primary completion date | March 26, 2027 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Managed by a physician staffed mobile intensive care unit (MICU). - With an indication of emergency prehospital endotracheal intubation. Exclusion Criteria: - Pregnant women - Patients with a "not to be resuscitated" indication. - Patients with predictors of difficult intubation (that can be collected in the prehospital setting, including previous history of face, neck, throat surgery or pathology, limited mandibular protrusion, cervical spine trauma, facial trauma, ear-nose-throat malignancy, head or neck burns, history of previous difficult airways) for whom the use of a bougie is indicated on first intubation attempt. - Patients under guardianship, trusteeship or safeguard of justice and patients with no health insurance. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
France | Nantes University Hospital | Nantes | Loire Atlantique |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Nantes University Hospital |
France,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Number of first pass success during prehospital emergency intubation | Successful intubation on first attempt | Within 10 minutes following blade introduction | |
Secondary | Occurrence of hypoxia | SpO2 (pulsed oxygen saturation) <90% | Within 1 hour following intubation | |
Secondary | Occurrence of bradycardia | Heart rate <50 bpm | Within 1 hour following intubation | |
Secondary | Occurrence of cardiac arrest | Within 1 hour following intubation | ||
Secondary | Occurrence of death | Within 1 hour following intubation | ||
Secondary | Occurrence of pulmonary aspirations | Within 1 hour following intubation | ||
Secondary | Occurrence of severe cardiovascular collapse | Systolic blood pressure less than 65mmHg recorded at least once or less than 90 mmHg lasting 30 minutes despite 500-1,000 ml of fluid loading (crystalloids) or requiring introduction or increasing doses by more than 30% of vasoactive support | Within 1 hour following intubation | |
Secondary | Time between blade introduction to the confirmation of a correct tube placement | In minutes. The correct position of the endotracheal tube is confirmed by detection of end-tidal carbon dioxide. | Within 15 minutes following blade introduction | |
Secondary | Change in SpO2 (pulsed oxygen saturation) from the time of induction to lowest SpO2 up to 2 minutes after confirmation of correct tube placement | In percentage | Within 15 minutes following induction | |
Secondary | Occurrence of change in SpO2 of more than 3% from the time of induction to 2 minutes after confirmation of correct tube placement | Within 15 minutes following induction | ||
Secondary | Cormack-Lehane grade of glottic view at first intubation attempt | Within 10 minutes following first blade introduction | ||
Secondary | Number of laryngoscopies attempts to achieve correct endotracheal tube placement | Within 30 minutes following first blade introduction | ||
Secondary | Number of patients for whom the placement of an endotracheal tube was not possible in the pre-hospital setting | Within 30 minutes following first blade introduction | ||
Secondary | Difficulty perceived by the operator on first intubation attempt | 3-point Likert scale | Within 10 minutes following blade introduction | |
Secondary | Occurrence of injuries | Occurrence (yes/no) of injuries related to the intubation:
mucosal bleeding, laryngeal, tracheal, bronchial, mediastinal or oesophageal injuries |
Within 24 hours following intubation | |
Secondary | Occurrence of complications | Occurrence (yes/no) of complications related to the intubation:
aspiration pneumonia (new opacity on chest imaging within 48 hours after intubation, in comparison to the first chest imaging after hospital admission), pneumothorax (new air collection within the pleural cavity on chest imaging) |
Within 48 hours following intubation | |
Secondary | Change of SpO2/FiO2 ratio (pulsed oxygen saturation / fraction of inspired oxygen) between the time of confirmation of correct tube placement and the minimum ratio | SpO2/FiO2 collected every 10 minutes to determine the minimum ratio | Within one hour after confirmation of correct tube placement |
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Active, not recruiting |
NCT02399878 -
Intra-operative Inspiratory Oxygen Fraction and Postoperative Respiratory Complications
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N/A |