Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05504733 |
Other study ID # |
USUHS.2020-060 |
Secondary ID |
NM91959717 |
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
May 9, 2022 |
Est. completion date |
May 9, 2022 |
Study information
Verified date |
August 2022 |
Source |
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This is a single-blinded, randomized clinical trial to determine if the Layperson Audiovisual
Assist tourniquet's (LAVA TQ) ability to occlude arterial blood flow is non-inferior to that
of the Combat Application Tourniquet (CAT).
Description:
1. Background and Significance
Trauma is the leading cause of death in the United States for people ages 1 to 44;
uncontrolled bleeding is a leading cause of those deaths.1 Immediate hemorrhage control,
even prior to the arrival of emergency medical services, can save lives during these
emergencies. Since the launch of the Stop the Bleed (STB) campaign in 2015, the public
has been empowered to stop life-threatening hemorrhage.2 One of STB's five objectives is
to equip every bleeding control kit with audio and visual instructions; this has not yet
been achieved. Commonly used tourniquets, such as the Combat Application Tourniquet
(CAT) or Special Operations Forces Tourniquet (SOF-T), do not provide audio instructions
and are not designed to provide feedback to facilitate tourniquet application. A device
that could facilitate application and provide real-time instructions and feedback could
be immensely beneficial to both the public and the DoD, especially to minimally or
untrained people such as DoD civilians, contractors, and dependents on military
installations. To achieve the above mentioned STB's objective, the research team at the
National Center for Disaster Medicine and Public Health is devoted to develop a
layperson tourniquet with audio-visual instructions and performance feedback.
In January 2020, the research team conducted a pilot study to evaluate this novel
layperson tourniquet in a community lay public sample recruited from at the NBC Health
Expo in Washington, DC. Findings of this pilot study were promising. One highlight of
the results was that the proportion of participants who applied the tourniquet correctly
using the layperson tourniquet was significantly higher than that using the CAT (93.3%
versus 6.3%). Moreover, for when asked about their favoritism toward the tourniquet,
93.3% favored the novel layperson tourniquet, whereas 68.8% favored the CAT.
In addition to research results, feedback provided by the participants in this pilot
study allowed the research team and the manufacturing partner to make adjustments and
improvements to the testing device. Now we have completed a pilot study evaluating
overall user experience of the novel layperson tourniquet, our next step is to conduct a
functionality study examining the function of this novel layperson tourniquet and to see
if it performs on par with the CAT.
2. Objectives/Specific Aims/Research Questions
The objective of the study is to determine if the Layperson Audiovisual Assist
Tourniquet (LAVA TQ)'s ability to occlude arterial blood flow is non-inferior to a
Combat Application Tourniquet (CAT).
3. Study Procedures
This study will be a single blinded, randomized clinical trial. The study will be
conducted in a room at USU's Multidisciplinary Laboratories.
The study has two arms: SMART TQ is the experimental arm and CAT is the control arm. The
study will consist of three groups of individuals:
- Medical professionals who apply the tourniquet (we will call this group "medical
professionals" in this protocol).
- Volunteers who offer their legs for tourniquet application (we will call this group
of individuals "study participants").
- Blinded observers who will use a Doppler to check and monitor pulse. Absence of the
dorsalis pedis pulse will be used to indicate occlusion of blood flow. The pulse
monitored by the blinded observers will be used as an outcome for this research
study. The only person blinded in the study will be the person checking for a
successful application by measuring the doppler pulse - that is the blinded
observers. There will be a bedsheet, or similar screen, placed between the portion
of the participant's leg that has the tourniquet applied and the participant's foot
where the doppler pulse will be measured. In addition, the research team will
provide blinded observers noise-canceling headphones to minimize the influence of
audio instructions provided by the LAVA TQ.
We will recruit two medical professionals and two blinded observers and consent
volunteers (i.e., participants).
Two medical professionals will attend a training session prior to the study. The session
will allow the study team to verify that medical professionals can apply both types of
tourniquets successfully. We anticipate this training session lasting no more than one
hour and will recruit one participant for the training session.
Upon the completion of the informed consent, participants will be assigned study ID
numbers. The study steps are below:
- A study participant enters the study room, completing a demographic information
sheet and taking blood pressure, and then lies down with the face and torso facing
up.
- To capture the baseline dorsalis pedis (DP) pulse: A blinded observer uses a
doppler ultrasound to check DP pulse, the artery pulse on the surface of the foot.
Doppler ultrasound is a small medical ultrasound machine that uses high-frequency
sound waves to measure the amount of blood flow through the arteries and veins. The
doppler ultrasound probe will be placed on the exposed foot, a pulse detected, and
the location where the pulse is detected on that foot will be marked with an "X"
using a surgical marker, and the doppler probed removed. This marked location will
be where the doppler probe is placed later to determine whether there is a pulse.
- The research team member will measure the circumference of the leg at the area of
tourniquet application. To keep the application location consistent across all the
participants, we will mark where on the leg the tourniquet should be placed for
each application.
- A medical professional records which leg will be used for tourniquet application
(left leg or right leg).
- The medical professional applies the tourniquet. This is the first application of
the tourniquet.
- Upon the completion of the tourniquet application, the blinded observer records the
presence or absence of a dopplerable pulse. A blinded observer again uses a doppler
ultrasound probe to check the dorsalis pedis (DP) pulse, the artery pulse on the
surface of the foot, at the previously marked "X" location on the foot.
- The medical professional removes the tourniquet and the study participant takes a
break.
- The medical professional places a blood pressure cuff first and then places a
tourniquet over the blood pressure cuff. This is the second application of the
tourniquet. The blood pressure cuff will be attached to a pressure sensor to
measure surface pressure under the tourniquet. The medical professional will
tighten the tourniquet until the doppler pulse is eliminated. The medical
professional will then read and record the pressure readings.
- The medical professional removes the tourniquet.
The procedures will then be repeated to a participant's other leg for the other arm. For
example, if a participant is initially assigned to the CAT and uses the right leg for
tourniquet application. The participant will then be in the LAVA TQ arm for the left
leg.
Termination Procedures: For the first tourniquet application on each leg, the observer
will use doppler ultrasound to assess the participant's foot for a present or absent
dorsalis pedis pulse. The observer will make the assessment at the location previously
marked with a surgical marker. As soon as the pulse is determined to be present or
absent, the observer will verbally tell the medical professional, "remove the tourniquet
now."
For the second tourniquet application on each leg, the medical professional will tighten
the tourniquet on top of the neonatal blood pressure cuff as described. The study team
member will record the pressure. As soon as the pressure is noted, the study team member
will tell the medical professional, "remove the tourniquet now."
Participant Post-Application Assessment: Following the application of two tourniquets to
both legs, the study team will ask the participant to rest while lying on the table for
five minutes. After five minutes, the study team member will ask the participant the
following questions:
- Do you have any persistent pain beyond mild aching at the application site?
- Do you have numbness, tingling, or other abnormal sensations?
- Does your leg feel weak?
If the answer is yes to any question, the team member will ask the participant to rest
for five more minutes and re-ask the questions. If the answer to any question is still
yes, the study team member will recommend that the participant seek medical care at an
emergency department or with the participant's physician. If the study team member or
participant is concerned that they are experiencing a medical emergency, they will call
9-1-1 and alert any of the medical professionals assisting with the study for
assistance.
If the answer to the questions is no, the study team member will ask the participant to
walk up and down the hall in the MDL. The study team member will observe the participant
ambulating. If the person feels normal while walking, they can be discharged from the
study.
The study team member will be advised to follow-up with their physician or emergency
department for medical care if either leg develops worsening pain, swelling, redness,
coldness, or bluish or pale color, or if they have shortness of breath or chest pain.
The study team member will advise the participant that some mild local bruising or
redness in the area of the tourniquet application may occur and that it does not require
medical evaluation.
In addition, given the LAVA TQ is an abbreviated investigational device, we will follow
the abbreviation requirements specified by the FDA.
4. Data Collection
The outcome variables in the study are: 1. the participants' resting blood pressure, 2.
the presence or absence of dorsalis pedis pulse after tourniquet application, and 3. the
surface pressure reading when the tourniquet is tightened. At the beginning of the
study, participants will be asked to complete a demographic information sheet. On this
sheet, they will fill out their age, gender, race, and ethnicity.
5. Statistical Considerations
The primary outcome variable for this research study binary (successfully stop the pulse:
yes/no) and we conducted a power analysis for a parallel group non-inferiority trial.
Assuming the two arms have the same high successful rate, with 80% power, and define the
non-inferiority limit as 10% (so that a difference bigger than this would matter in
practice), we estimated sample size required for each group is 13 applications (at least), so
a total sample size of 26 applications (at least). Given the potential missing data and to
ensure we will have enough statistical power for the final analyses, we will set the total
sample size of 40 applications for this study. Since the tourniquet will be applied to
participants' both legs (not at the same time), each leg will be one application and one
participant will be able to fulfill two applications. As such, we will recruit no more than
20 participants for the study session and one additional participant for the training
session.