Critical Illness Clinical Trial
Official title:
Prospective Clinical Surveillance With Application of Trigger Tools in Critically Ill Patients
This study evaluates the impact of prospective clinical surveillance with the use of triggers to identify risk of adverse events with prompt adoption of interventions on the stabilization time of critically ill patients.
In the 1999 landmark report, "To Err is Human: Building a Safe Health System," the Institute
of Medicine estimated that avoidable errors in health contributed to 44 to 98,000 deaths and
more than 1 million injuries annually in the United States (1). Several years after the
publication of this study, numerous initiatives have emerged to improve patient safety in the
USA and the world (2).
An important advance in the detection of adverse events is the use of triggers, algorithms
that use patient data to look for consistent patterns that predict the onset of an adverse
event (3).
The Institute for Health Care Improvement (IHI) has developed several tools with the use of
triggers. The Global Trigger Tool (GTT), developed in 2009, is a tool applied retrospectively
and proved to be effective in the detection of adverse events (4). It is an easily applicable
method for quantifying damage. Countries outside USA did not have the same result with their
application and questioned their benefit (5,6,7).
Using a prospective clinical surveillance tool, which consisted of direct observation by a
trained nurse, Forster et al (8) identified a high risk of adverse events and a significant
variation of risks and sub types between services. These results have suggested that
institutions will have to assess service-specific safety issues to define priorities and
improvement strategies in the design of care. This model was later used by Wong et al.(9),
who identified a wide range of factors contributing to adverse events. Despite the
prospective methodology, the impact of the actions instituted to prevent the events was not
identified in these studies.
Prospective clinical surveillance with the use of triggers as a tool to identify the risk of
adverse events, with the prompt adoption of interventions and evaluation of the evidence of
the expected outcome may be the answer to improving patient safety, which remains a major
problem of public health 20 years after the publication of the reference "To err is human".
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the impact of prospective trigger tools and near real time
interventions on the stabilization time of critically ill patients.
METHOD This is a retrospective cohort study conducted at a surgical intensive care unit (13
beds), a medical intensive care unit (19 beds) and a surgical and trauma high complexity unit
(12 beds) of a tertiary hospital. The hospital São Domingos Ethics in Research Committee
approved the study (number 1.487.682).
All adult patients (18 years of age or older) who were admitted to one of the four intensive
care units were included in the study, in the period from November 1, 2017 to October 30,
2018.
Patients who are readmitted and those with length of ICU stay less than 48 hours were
excluded, since this is the minimum time required for the triggering of the trigger and its
corresponding intervention.
Once admitted to the ICU and meeting the inclusion criteria, patients were followed by the
multidisciplinary surveillance team composed of physicians, nurses, physiotherapists and
pharmacists. They conducted a daily active search for the triggers in the medical records. To
ensure the reliability of the data collected, each professional is responsible for a specific
trigger. If one of them is activated, the team member approaches the care team responsible
for the patient within 24 hours, and the data is also presented in the daily
multidisciplinary round. This moment is still used to solve all doubts regarding the
triggering of the trigger and its respective conduct or change in the therapeutic plan in
order to reach the expected result of each trigger.
The prospective trigger tool uses indicators that are capable of predicting serious
complications that increase the morbidity and mortality of ICU patients that could be
preventable. The triggers used were:
1. Acute kidney injury (KDIGO) (10) - When triggered, the patient is classified as at risk
(1.5 to 1.9 x baseline creatinine or increase of 0.3 mg / dl), injury (2.0 to 2.9 x
baseline creatinine) or insufficiency (3 x basal creatinine). It is expected that the
risk can be identified early and that therapeutic interventions be undertaken in order
to prevent progression to renal replacement therapy.
2. Delta SOFA (11)- The SOFA (Sequential Organ Failure Assessment) of all patients are
calculated on the first and third days. The increase in this score on the third day
identify clinical worsening, triggering the trigger and requiring revision of the
initial therapeutic plan. The impact of this change is analyzed by calculating the fifth
day SOFA, which should be lower.
3. Hypoglycaemia (glycemia <60 mg / dl) - Once this trigger is activated, it is expected
that the clinical intervention will be effective to prevent the recurrence of
hypoglycemia in the next 24 hours.
4. Drug interaction risk D or X - When identifying a D or X risk interaction in the
patient's prescription, the assistant team is advised to make alterations in the
therapeutic plan in order to avoid adverse drug reactions.
5. Antimicrobial stewardship - Whenever an antimicrobial regimen is started or modified it
is assessed for its suitability through MALDI-TOF and sensitivity test. If there is no
microbiological identification, the clinical improvement, represented by at least two of
the three following parameters (leukocyte drop, absence of fever and improvement of CRP)
is taken into account.
Demographic data also were collected including age, gender, hospitalization category
(clinical or surgical), Charlson comorbidities index and score and SAPS 3 (Simplified Acute
Physiology Score 3) with its respective risk of death.
To evaluate the impact of the tool on the time of stabilization of patients, two groups will
be compared: the first will be composed of patients who did not triggered triggers and the
second by patients who triggered triggers and had interventions.
For the calculation of the stabilization time, the long-term risk rating of the Epimed
Performance software (Epimed solutions) will be used, which allows us to estimate the length
of ICU stay of the patients individually using more than 60 variables.
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