Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Enrolling by invitation
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05880576 |
Other study ID # |
P00044159 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Enrolling by invitation |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
September 2023 |
Est. completion date |
June 30, 2025 |
Study information
Verified date |
September 2023 |
Source |
Boston Children's Hospital |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Unrecognized coarctation of the aorta (CoA) is a life-threatening component of congenital
heart disease (CHD) in which narrowing of the aorta causes obstructed blood flow to the lower
half of the body; it can occur in isolation or in combination with other defects. CoA is the
type of CHD most likely to be missed by current newborn screening. An evolving coarctation
(during closure of the ductus arteriosus) can be challenging to diagnose until often
devastating end-organ injury manifests, even in the ICU setting. This study will evaluate
currently used tools, such as four extremity blood pressures and pulse oximetry, and the
investigators will test new tools - resonance Raman spectroscopy (RRS) and
photoplethysmography analysis- to assess the adequacy of oxygen delivery in newborns who are
at risk for aortic arch obstruction. The investigators hypothesize that combining an
assessment of commonly used non-invasive monitoring tools, new components of these
traditional tools, and RRS, will have improved sensitivity in detecting critical impairments
to tissue oxygen delivery in newborns with suspected critical aortic arch obstruction.
Description:
Coarctation of the aorta (CoA) is a potentially life-threatening form of congenital heart
disease (CHD) in which an anatomic narrowing of the aortic arch may cause critical aortic
arch obstruction (AAO) following closure of the ductus arteriosus (DA). CoA accounts for 6-8%
of all CHD and occurs in about 1 in every 1800 babies born in the United States each year.
Despite this prevalence, CoA frequently eludes detection on both prenatal imaging and CHD
screening. If undiagnosed, infants may present with catastrophic shock, often leading to
mortality or severe morbidities. In many cases, the anatomic appearance of the aortic arch in
the fetal or early postnatal period raises suspicion for AAO that can only be confirmed by
allowing the DA to become restrictive and closely monitoring for hemodynamic changes.
However, the process of monitoring hemodynamics during ductal closure (MHDC, i.e. the 'arch
watch') is variable across institutions and can be insensitive to critical deficiencies in
oxygen delivery in the setting of decreased blood flow, even in subspecialized ICU
environments. Current approaches to monitoring hemodynamic changes in neonates with possible
AAO revolve around non-invasive measurements of oxygen saturation (i.e. pulse oximetry, near
infrared spectroscopy (NIRS)) and tissue perfusion (i.e. femoral pulse strength, urine
output, blood pressure). There are no publications which systematically and concurrently
assess these trends during this hemodynamic transition, and as such, there are no agreed upon
thresholds to alert clinicians that a developing AAO is causing impaired tissue
perfusion/oxygenation. Exploration of traditional measures of tissue oxygenation may prove
more sensitive and specific at identifying compromise in newborns with critical AAO. For
example, certain pulse oximetry waveform characteristics (photoplethysmography, PPG) have
shown differences in healthy newborns versus those with CoA. Resonance Raman spectroscopy
(RRS) is another validated non-invasive method that assesses peripheral tissue oxygenation in
neonates and has been shown to correlate well with invasive markers of tissue oxygenation.
The investigators and others have utilized RRS in healthy neonates and in animals to detect
tissue hypoperfusion. To test the hypothesis that a validated MHDC process that combines
commonly used non-invasive monitoring tools, new components of these traditional tools, and
RRS, will have improved sensitivity in detecting critical impairments to tissue oxygen
delivery in newborns with suspected critical AAO, the investigators identified the following
aims:
Aim I: To assess the reliability of currently deployed non-invasive markers of tissue
oxygenation/perfusion (femoral pulse strength, pre- vs. post- ductal blood pressure and
saturation gradient, cerebral/renal NIRS, and urine output) in identifying a critical AAO
that will need intervention in the newborn period.
Aim II: To explore the sensitivity of PPG to identify critical AAO requiring intervention in
the newborn period.
Aim III: To determine the feasibility of assessing oxygen utilization at the tissue level
based on RRS during MHDC and examine its predictive capability in identifying those infants
with AAO who will require arch intervention in the newborn period.