Pleural Effusion Clinical Trial
— NEWTONOfficial title:
The Impact of a Gravity Versus Vacuum Based Indwelling Tunneled Pleural Drainage System on Pain: A Multicenter, Randomized Trial
Malignant pleural effusion remains a debilitating complication of end stage cancer, which can be greatly improved by the introduction of the indwelling tunneled pleural catheter (IPC). However, there is no standard of care regarding drainage and limited data on the utility of different drainage techniques. In addition, many patients develop discomfort and chest pain during drainage. The investigators propose to evaluate gravity drainage and suction drainage on quality of life measures and outcomes.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 200 |
Est. completion date | December 31, 2026 |
Est. primary completion date | December 31, 2026 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Clinical indications for placement of IPC for malignant pleural effusion a. Pleural effusion with symptomatic improvement in dyspnea after drainage of ipsilateral effusion - Clinically confident symptomatic malignant pleural effusion 1. Histocytological proof of pleural malignancy 2. Recurrent large pleural effusion in context of histologically proven cancer outside the pleural space - Plans for placement of IPC within ten days of enrollment - Age > 17 years - Sufficient fluid on ultrasound to allow for safe insertion of IPC Exclusion Criteria: - Recent (less than 60 days) thoracic surgery or chest trauma causing chronic pain - Pregnant or lactating mothers - Previous ipsilateral chemical pleurodesis - Current contralateral indwelling pleural catheter - Known rib or thoracic skeletal metastasis causing pain - Concern for active pleural infection - Respiratory failure - Irreversible bleeding diathesis - Inability to provide care for indwelling tunneled pleural catheter - Significantly loculated pleural space precluding drainage of pleural space, for which IPC alone will likely not offer symptomatic benefit - Estimated life expectancy of < 30 days (however, active enrollment in hospice program is not an exclusion criteria) - Inability to read/understand/write in the English language - Inability to follow-up for appointments/protocol - Subject has any clinical condition, diagnosis, or social circumstance that, in the opinion of the investigator would mean participation in the study would be contraindicated. - Enrollment in alternative pleural catheter trial that would preclude enrollment within this trial |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | University of Oxford | Oxford | |
United States | Northwest Community Healthcare | Arlington Heights | Illinois |
United States | Johns Hopkins Hospital | Baltimore | Maryland |
United States | Medical University of South Carolina | Charleston | South Carolina |
United States | Vanderbilt University Medical Center | Nashville | Tennessee |
United States | Swedish Medical Center | Seattle | Washington |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Johns Hopkins University | Medical University of South Carolina, Northwest Community Healthcare, Rocket Medical plc, Swedish Medical Center, University of Oxford, Vanderbilt University Medical Center |
United States, United Kingdom,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in chest pain as assessed by Visual Analog Scale (VAS) | The primary endpoint is the difference between the mean daily change in pain score during IPC drainage via the vacuum bottle technique and IPC drainage via the gravity bag technique over two weeks after IPC placement. Pre-drainage and post-drainage pain scores will be recorded each day of IPC placement. Measurements are in millimeters along a 10 cm VAS. VAS score is a range of 0 to 100. Lower limit is 0, meaning no pain; upper limit is 100, meaning extreme pain. | Daily, up to 2 weeks | |
Secondary | Change in mean difference in chest pain as assessed by VAS | This secondary endpoint is the difference between the change in pain scores via vacuum bottle vs. gravity bag pre-IPC placement to the last available score after IPC placement. This last available score would be at 12 weeks or time of pleurodesis. Measurements are in millimeters along a 10 cm Visual Analog Scale (VAS). VAS score is a range of 0 to 100. Lower limit is 0, meaning no pain; upper limit is 100, meaning extreme pain. | pre-IPC placement, 12 weeks post IPC placement or time of pleurodesis | |
Secondary | Change in SF 36-Item Health Survey score | This secondary endpoint is the difference between SF 36-Item Health Survey 1.0 scores via vacuum bottle vs. gravity bag from pre-IPC drainage to last available score after IPC placement (at 12 weeks or time of pleurodesis). Scoring is a 2-step process in which the numerical response from the Survey is first converted into a 0-100 scale (0 as lowest and 100 as highest possible score) using a conversion table by SF developers. These new values would be averaged according to their group identified in a second conversion table. | pre-IPC placement, 12 weeks post IPC placement or time of pleurodesis | |
Secondary | Change in Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy (FACIT)-Dyspnea survey score | This secondary endpoint is the difference between FACIT-Dyspnea scores via vacuum bottle vs. gravity bag from pre-IPC drainage to the last available score after IPC placement (at 12 weeks or time of pleurodesis). Individual responses are converted into scores, then summed for an overall score. Scores range from 0 (lower limit) to 30 (high limit); the higher the score, the worse the dyspnea. | pre-IPC placement, 12 weeks post IPC placement or time of pleurodesis |
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