Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Terminated
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04274192 |
Other study ID # |
239863 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Terminated |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
December 9, 2020 |
Est. completion date |
January 28, 2021 |
Study information
Verified date |
April 2022 |
Source |
University of Arkansas |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Patients will be randomized to begin the study with either NAVA-synchronized or continuous
HFNC. Each patient will receive two 15-minute trials at different levels of continuous HFNC
and two 15-minute trials at corresponding levels of synchronized HFNC. In synchronized HFNC,
using the NIV NAVA mode on the ventilator each subject will receive a constant minimum flow,
but with each neurally triggered breath (as measured with an Edi catheter), an additional
flow will be given to the patient. This differs from continuous HFNC in which the subject
receives a constant flow without variation. Subjects will be observed during the entirety of
these trials. Values for the primary and secondary outcomes will be monitored, recorded, and
calculated.
Description:
Prior to the study period each subject will have the following monitoring equipment placed
(if not already present): Edi catheter, transcutaneous monitor (TCM4, Radiometer, Brea, CA,
USA) to measure CO2 and O2 levels, pulse oximeter probe (MasimoSET, Irvine, CA, USA) to
measure oxygen saturations and heart rate, and RIP bands (SleepSense, MFI Medical, San Diego,
CA, USA) around the chest and abdomen to measure breathing movements and relative tidal
volume.
Each subject will be randomized on the day the study is to occur to begin with either
NAVA-synchronized or continuous HFNC before crossing over to the other mode to serve as
his/her own control. The same RAM cannula will be used in both study arms and will provide a
leak of 60-80% as recommended by the product manual. The delivery of high flow during both
synchronized and continuous HFNC will be given at two commonly provided levels of high flow:
6 LPM and 8 LPM, given in the same order in each mode (6 LPM then 8 LPM). Each subject will
receive 15-minute trials of each mode-level combination, for a total of four trials. During
each trial, the first 10 minutes will be used for stabilization, and the last 5 minutes will
be used for data collection, as has been done in previous trials. Thus, the mode-level
combinations of the trials will be as follows: for infants randomized to begin with
synchronized support: synchronized-6 LPM, synchronized-8 LPM, unsynchronized-6 LPM,
unsynchronized-8 LPM. For infants randomized to begin with unsynchronized support:
unsynchronized-6 LPM, unsynchronized-8 LPM, synchronized-6 LPM, unsynchronized-8 LPM.
The flows described in the NAVA-synchronized trials refer to the peak flow provided during
inspiration. A baseline flow rate of 2 LPM will be provided expiration in these trials (using
the PEEP setting corresponding to the appropriate flow rate). During the unsynchronized
trials, the continuous high flow rate will be provided (as is common practice with the use of
HFNC). During the NAVA-synchronized HFNC trials, the Edi trigger will be set to 0.5
microvolts, apnea time to 5 seconds, back up rate to 10 breaths per minute, and backup
pressure settings will be set to provide an estimated peak flow of 6 or 8 LPM according to
the designated trial (again, using the pressure setting corresponding to the appropriate flow
rate).
During NAVA-synchronized HFNC, the NIV NAVA mode will be set in such a way that synchronized
HFNC will be provided. A minimal end-expiratory flow of 2 LPM will be provided using the
positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP) setting in the NIV NAVA mode on the ventilator. The
PEEP setting corresponding to 2 LPM via the pneumotachograph will be used. In order to
deliver the desired peak flow rate with each neurally-triggered breath, a NAVA level of 15
cmH2O/μV will be set, then the maximum pressure setting that corresponds to the desired flow
rate using the pneumotachograph will be used for the study. The subject will thus be provided
with "synchronized HFNC". This contrasts with the constant-flow trials when subjects will
receive a constant and non-synchronized flow using the HFNC software on the ventilator.
Servo-u ventilators and Servo Tracker Software (Maquet Critical Care, Solna, Sweden) will be
used in order to track Edi signal. The MP100 Biopac data acquisition (Biopac Systems Inc.,
Goleta, CA, USA) will be used to collect data from the monitoring devices. HFNC will be
delivered using appropriately sized RAM cannula to allow for air leak around the subject's
nares. Persistent bradycardia (less than 100 beats per minutes), desaturation (<85%), or
hypercarbia (transcutaneous CO2 >70) will result in cessation of the study.