Weaning Failure Clinical Trial
— TrainToWeanOfficial title:
Improving Our Understanding of Respiratory Muscle Training to Facilitate Weaning From Mechanical Ventilation in the ICU
NCT number | NCT04658498 |
Other study ID # | S64871 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Recruiting |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | February 1, 2023 |
Est. completion date | October 2026 |
Mechanical ventilation is a life-saving treatment frequently applied in intensive care unit (ICU). Nonetheless, by putting at rest the respiratory muscles, it can lead to respiratory muscle weakness and atrophy, which are accompanied by prolonged duration of mechanical ventilation, difficult weaning and increased ICU mortality. Despite a strong theoretical rationale and some evidence supporting the use of inspiratory muscle training (IMT) to address respiratory muscle weakness and atrophy, the optimal approach to IMT remains largely uncertain. In fact, mechanistic studies evaluating physiological adaptations that occur in respiratory muscles of mechanically ventilated patients in response to different training regimens have not been conducted so far. The aim of this study is to comprehensively investigate changes in respiratory muscle function in response to three different conditions that patients will be exposed to during their period of weaning from mechanical ventilation.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 90 |
Est. completion date | October 2026 |
Est. primary completion date | October 2026 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Difficult and prolonged weaning patients - Adequate oxygenation - Febrile temperature < 38ÂșC - Hemodynamic stability - Stable blood pressure - No or minimal vasopressors - No myocardial ischemia - Adequate hemoglobin and mentation - Resolution of disease acute phase - Able to follow simple verbal commands related to IMT - Mechanically ventilated via a tracheostomy or endotracheal tube Exclusion Criteria: - Pre-existing neuromuscular disease - Agitation - Hemodynamically instable (arrhythmia, decompensated heart failure, coronary insufficiency) - Hemoptysis - Diaphoresis - Spinal cord injury above T8 - Use of any type of home MV support prior to hospitalization - Skeletal pathology that impairs chest wall movements - Poor general prognosis or fatal outcome |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Belgium | University Hospital Leuven | Leuven |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
KU Leuven |
Belgium,
Dres M, Goligher EC, Dube BP, Morawiec E, Dangers L, Reuter D, Mayaux J, Similowski T, Demoule A. Diaphragm function and weaning from mechanical ventilation: an ultrasound and phrenic nerve stimulation clinical study. Ann Intensive Care. 2018 Apr 23;8(1):53. doi: 10.1186/s13613-018-0401-y. — View Citation
Dres M, Goligher EC, Heunks LMA, Brochard LJ. Critical illness-associated diaphragm weakness. Intensive Care Med. 2017 Oct;43(10):1441-1452. doi: 10.1007/s00134-017-4928-4. Epub 2017 Sep 15. — View Citation
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Laveneziana P, Albuquerque A, Aliverti A, Babb T, Barreiro E, Dres M, Dube BP, Fauroux B, Gea J, Guenette JA, Hudson AL, Kabitz HJ, Laghi F, Langer D, Luo YM, Neder JA, O'Donnell D, Polkey MI, Rabinovich RA, Rossi A, Series F, Similowski T, Spengler CM, Vogiatzis I, Verges S. ERS statement on respiratory muscle testing at rest and during exercise. Eur Respir J. 2019 Jun 13;53(6):1801214. doi: 10.1183/13993003.01214-2018. Print 2019 Jun. — View Citation
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Vorona S, Sabatini U, Al-Maqbali S, Bertoni M, Dres M, Bissett B, Van Haren F, Martin AD, Urrea C, Brace D, Parotto M, Herridge MS, Adhikari NKJ, Fan E, Melo LT, Reid WD, Brochard LJ, Ferguson ND, Goligher EC. Inspiratory Muscle Rehabilitation in Critically Ill Adults. A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2018 Jun;15(6):735-744. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201712-961OC. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Maximal Inspiratory Pressure (PImax) | Using a unidirectional valve which will be connected to the patient's tracheostomy tube or endotracheal tube for an uninterrupted period of 25 seconds. | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Diaphragm mobility, thickness and thickening fraction by ultrasounds | Assessment by diaphragm ultrasounds | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Change in contractile material and structural alteration of sternocleidomastoid muscle | By analyzing muscle microbiopsies using Hematoxylin & Eosin (H&E) staining. | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Change in fiber proportion of sternocleidomastoid muscle fibers | By analyzing muscle microbiopsies with immunostaining of the myosin heavy chain. | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Change in size of sternocleidomastoid muscle fibers | By analyzing muscle microbiopsies with immunostaining of the myosin heavy chain. | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Change in amount of satellite cells of sternocleidomastoid muscle | By analyzing muscle microbiopsies with Pax7 immunostaining | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Change in amount of fibrotic tissue of sternocleidomastoid muscle | By analyzing muscle microbiopsies with Masson staining | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Change of gene expression of atrophy/hypertrophy related pathways of sternocleidomastoid muscle | By analyzing muscle microbiopsies with RT2 profiler PCR array skeletal muscle, Qiagen | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Change in cell proliferation of sternocleidomastoid muscle | By analyzing muscle microbiopsies cell proliferation assays | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Change in cell differentiation of sternocleidomastoid muscle | By analyzing muscle microbiopsies cell differentiation assays | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Change in Blood Flow Index (BFI) of extra-diaphragmatic respiratory muscles | Measured by near-infrared spectroscopy in combination with injections of the tracer indocyanine green dye (ICG), with optodes transcutaneously positioned on the scalene, sternocleidomastoid and upper rectus abdominis muscles. | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Change in Tissue Oxygenation Index (TOI) of ex of extra-diaphragmatic respiratory muscles | Measured by near-infrared spectroscopy with optodes transcutaneously positioned on the scalene, sternocleidomastoid and upper rectus abdominis muscles | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Change in signal amplitude of diaphragm electromyography | Diaphragm electromyography will be collected with an esophageal electrode catheter | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Change in signal amplitude of electromyography of extra-diaphragmatic respiratory muscles | Electromyography of scalene, sternocleidomastoid, parasternal intercostal and rectus abdominis muscles will be collected through surface electromyography electrodes | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days | |
Secondary | Esophageal and gastric pressure | Using a multifunction nasogastric catheter | Maximal duration of IMT treatment: 28 days |
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