Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This multicenter study will validate a panel of serum, imaging, and clinical biomarkers to classify patient outcome early after out-of-hospital pediatric cardiac arrest. Results are expected to have a positive and immediate impact in advancing clinical care and outcomes for these children. This work will provide clinicians, families, and researchers with superior tools to assess the severity of brain injury early after resuscitation in order to know who is at risk of brain injury and may benefit from neuroprotective interventions, to monitor response to these interventions, to plan rehabilitation strategy, and to optimize the design of research studies that test novel interventions to improve neurological outcome after cardiac arrest.


Clinical Trial Description

Children with cardiac arrest (CA) have mortality rates of 50-90%, largely due to neurological failure as part of the post-resuscitation syndrome. There is a critical gap of knowledge and tools to accurately classify outcome after pediatric CA. Physical examination and laboratory testing inadequately assess the severity of neurologic injury and outcome. Hazards of misclassification include risking adverse effects from ineffective therapies and non-treatment of ostensibly well patients who later are found to have neurologic deficits. Early and accurate identification of the eventual severity of neurologic injury would allow for timely neuroprotective interventions and/or more targeted testing of new therapies in specific risk populations. The long term objective is to improve the neurological outcome of children surviving CA. In this study, investigators will model and validate serum and imaging biomarkers of brain injury with empirical support, and assess their accuracy together with clinical variables in classifying outcome after pediatric CA. The central hypothesis is that serum and imaging biomarkers of brain injury, together with clinical variables, will critically aid in the early classification of favorable outcome after pediatric CA (Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales score [VABS] > 70) 1 year after pediatric CA in a multicenter prospective study (8-12 centers and 248 subjects). Strong preliminary data supports this hypothesis, and biomarkers will be tested for outcome classification accuracy in the following 3 specific aims: Aim 1) Serum biomarkers of neuronal (neuron specific enolase and ubiquitin carboxy-terminal hydrolase-L1) and glial injury (S100b and glial fibrillary acidic protein) Aim 2) Regional (occipital-parietal cortex, basal ganglia, and thalamus) brain MRI (T1/T2 and diffusion-weighted imaging) and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) biomarkers of neuronal injury (N-acetyl-aspartate) and energy failure (lactate) Aim 3 will model the combination of strong serum and imaging biomarkers of brain injury with clinical variables. We will assess serum biomarkers of brain mitochondrial injury with potential for novel therapeutic targets (cardiolipin and oxidized cardiolipin) in an exploratory aim. This proposed research is innovative, because a combined panel of serum and imaging biomarkers with clinical variables to accurately classify outcome after pediatric CA will be prospectively developed and optimized. These proposed aims leverage recent pilot successes and should generate accurate and reliable models of biomarkers that markedly improve post-resuscitation clinical care in children after CA. Furthermore, these results are expected to have a positive impact in advancing neurocritical care for these children, with forthcoming development of a serum biomarker point of care test and biomarker panels that will accurately classify risk of unfavorable outcome for clinicians and researchers needing to stratify by severity of injury, to monitor response to therapy, and ultimately to assist in their rehabilitation and recovery. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02769026
Study type Observational
Source University of Pittsburgh
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date June 1, 2017
Completion date March 1, 2021

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT06048068 - Removing Surrogates' Uncertainty to Reduce Fear and Anxiety After Cardiac Events N/A
Recruiting NCT05558228 - Accuracy of Doppler Ultrasound Versus Manual Palpation of Pulse in Cardiac Arrest
Completed NCT03685383 - Cytokine Adsorption in Post-cardiac Arrest Syndrome in Patients Requiring Extracorporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation N/A
Completed NCT04619498 - Effectiveness of an Interactive Cognitive Support Tablet App to Improve the Management of Pediatric Cardiac Arrest N/A
Completed NCT04584645 - A Digital Flu Intervention for People With Cardiovascular Conditions N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05649891 - Checklists Resuscitation Emergency Department N/A
Withdrawn NCT02352350 - Lactate in Cardiac Arrest N/A
Completed NCT03024021 - Cerebral Oxymetry and Neurological Outcome in Therapeutic Hypothermia
Completed NCT02247947 - Proteomics to Identify Prognostic Markers After CPR and to Estimate Neurological Outcome
Completed NCT02275234 - Care After Resuscitation
Completed NCT01936597 - Prospective Study of 3 Phone Assistance Strategies to Achieve a Continuous Cardiac Massage N/A
Completed NCT01972087 - Simulation Training to Improve 911 Dispatcher Identification of Cardiac Arrest N/A
Completed NCT01944605 - Intestinal Ischemia as a Stimulus for Systemic Inflammatory Response After Cardiac Arrest N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01239420 - Norwegian Cardio-Respiratory Arrest Study
Completed NCT01191736 - Ultra-Brief Versus Brief Hands Only CPR Video Training With and Without Psychomotor Skill Practice N/A
Completed NCT00878644 - Therapeutic Hypothermia to Improve Survival After Cardiac Arrest in Pediatric Patients-THAPCA-OH [Out of Hospital] Trial Phase 3
Completed NCT00880087 - Therapeutic Hypothermia to Improve Survival After Cardiac Arrest in Pediatric Patients-THAPCA-IH [In Hospital] Trial N/A
Completed NCT00729794 - Vasopressin, Epinephrine, and Steroids for Cardiac Arrest Phase 3
Recruiting NCT00441753 - Cerebral Bloodflow and Carbondioxide Reactivity During Mild Therapeutic Hypothermia in Patients After Cardiac Arrest N/A
Completed NCT00347477 - Fluid Shifts in Patients Treated With Therapeutic Hypothermia After Cardiac Arrest Phase 3