Critical Illness Clinical Trial
— PROACTIVEOfficial title:
Propranolol as an Anxiolytic to Reduce the Use of Sedatives From Critically-ill Adults Receiving Mechanical Ventilation: An Open-label Randomized Controlled Trial (PROACTIVE)
Verified date | December 2022 |
Source | Ottawa Hospital Research Institute |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The COVID-19 pandemic has led to shortages of intravenous sedatives due to increased ICU patient admissions and greater use of mechanical ventilation. A shortage of sedatives is as concerning as a shortage of mechanical ventilators since critically ill patients require sedation for comfort and to tolerate mechanical ventilation. Anti-adrenergic medications are increasingly recognized for their role in sedation of critically ill patients. Propranolol is a plentiful and inexpensive, non-selective beta-adrenergic blocker with good penetration of the blood-brain barrier, which can reduce agitation and arousal. The study team published a single-centre retrospective study of 64 mechanically-ventilated patients which found the initiation of propranolol was associated with an 86% reduction in propofol dose and a roughly 50% reduction in midazolam dose while maintaining the same level of sedation. Propranolol has the potential to mitigate the threat posed by worldwide sedative shortages and improve critical care management of patients who require mechanical ventilation. This study seeks to evaluate whether the addition of propranolol to a standard sedation regimen reduces the dose of sedative needed in critically ill patients requiring mechanical ventilation. This study is an open-label randomized controlled trial, single-blinded with 1:1 allocation. Both arms will receive sedation according to usual intensive care unit practice with a sedative agent. The intervention arm will additionally receive enteral propranolol 20-60mg q6h titrated up over 24-48h until intravenous sedative doses have fallen to a minimal level (propofol <0.5mg/kg/h or midazolam <0.5mg/h) or the maximum dose of propranolol is reached. Intravenous sedative doses will be titrated downwards in response to sympatholysis produced by the propranolol, as evidenced by a decreasing heart rate or blood pressure. The control arm will receive sedation without the addition or propranolol. The primary outcome will be the change in primary sedative dose from baseline to Day 3 of enrollment. Analysis of the primary outcome will be a difference in differences; the change in sedative dose from baseline to Day 3 in the intervention group versus the same change in the control group. The Mann-Whitney U test will be used as a nonparametric test of independent samples for this outcome.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 72 |
Est. completion date | November 30, 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | November 30, 2022 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 19 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Adult patients admitted to an intensive care unit requiring mechanical ventilation and anticipated to require mechanical ventilation >48h - Patient has a sedation target (e.g. using the Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale or Sedation Agitation Scale) that is anticipated to be stable >48h - Minimum sedative infusion doses (any one of): - Propofol >/=1.5 mg/kg/h >24h - Midazolam >/=3.0 mg/h >24h Exclusion Criteria: - Sedation for paralysis - Use of neuromuscular blocking agents (patients may be eligible once these are discontinued) - Asthma or known reactive airways disease - 1st, 2nd or 3rd-degree heart block (with no permanent pacemaker) at the time of screening - Known history of congestive heart failure with ejection fraction <20% - HR<60 bpm at baseline - Hypotension requiring vasopressor support above the following levels - Norepinephrine dose >0.15mcg/kg/min or equivalent (>0.15mcg/kg/min epinephrine; >22.5 mcg/kg/min dopamine; >0.06 U/min vasopressin) - Phenylephrine >2.0 mcg/kg/min - Receiving 3 or more vasopressors, regardless of dose - Pregnancy or lactation - Allergy to propranolol - Patients for whom an enteral route of drug administration is not available - Patients who are on digoxin, diltiazem, or verapamil - Patients on chronic betablockers are eligible for enrolment. Patients allocated to the intervention arm will have their betablocker replaced with propranolol. Once propranolol is discontinued, the treating team may resume their usual betablocker. Control patients may continue their usual betablocker (unless it is propranolol) at the treating team's discretion. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Hamilton Health Sciences Centre - Hamilton General Hospital | Hamilton | Ontario |
Canada | The Ottawa Hospital | Ottawa | Ontario |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute | Hamilton Health Sciences Corporation, McMaster University, Sinai Health System, The Ottawa Hospital |
Canada,
Bergeron N, Dubois MJ, Dumont M, Dial S, Skrobik Y. Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist: evaluation of a new screening tool. Intensive Care Med. 2001 May;27(5):859-64. doi: 10.1007/s001340100909. — View Citation
Riker RR, Picard JT, Fraser GL. Prospective evaluation of the Sedation-Agitation Scale for adult critically ill patients. Crit Care Med. 1999 Jul;27(7):1325-9. doi: 10.1097/00003246-199907000-00022. — View Citation
Sessler CN, Gosnell MS, Grap MJ, Brophy GM, O'Neal PV, Keane KA, Tesoro EP, Elswick RK. The Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale: validity and reliability in adult intensive care unit patients. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2002 Nov 15;166(10):1338-44. doi: 10.1164/rccm.2107138. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Duration of propranolol use | Total number of days of propranolol use | Daily from enrollment to study withdrawal/completion (last day of propranolol dose given; discharge from ICU, 28 days, or death - whichever is first) | |
Other | Propranolol dose | Mean propranolol dose on day 3 | Day 3 of study (60-84hrs after enrollment) | |
Other | Ventilator-free days | Mean number of ventilator-free days in first 30 days of hospital intensive care unit admission | Day 1 of admission to the intensive care unit until 30 days, discharge from intensive care, or death (whichever is first) | |
Other | Delirium-free days | Mean number of delirium-free days in first 30 days of hospital intensive care unit admission, measured using the Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist | Day 1 of admission to the intensive care unit until 30 days, discharge from intensive care, or death (whichever is first) | |
Other | Hospital Length of Stay | Mean length of stay in hospital | Day 1 of hospital admission until hospital discharge date or date of death (whichever is first) | |
Other | Intensive Care Unit Length of Stay | Mean length of stay in the intensive care unit | Day 1 of intensive care unit admission until discharge date from intensive care unit or date of death (whichever is first) | |
Other | Hospital Mortality | Mortality rate among participants while in hospital | Upon study completion (after all 108 participants have completed the study, estimated at 6 months) and after 50 patients have been enrolled (estimated at 3 months) | |
Other | Direct Costs | Mean cost of sedative medication used in the intensive care unit among the intervention and control arms | Upon study completion (after all 108 participants have completed the study, estimated at 6 months) | |
Primary | Primary sedative dose change | Change from baseline in total daily dose of primary sedative on Day 3 | 24 hours prior to enrollment to Day 3 of the study (60-84hrs after enrollment) | |
Secondary | Sedation scores | Proportion of measured sedation scores within target range (to be defined a priori by treating team): Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale and/or the Sedation-Agitation Scale | Daily upon enrollment until study completion (discharge from ICU, 28 days, or death - whichever is first) | |
Secondary | Primary sedative dose | Proportion of participants whose sedative dose on day 3 are below a minimum level (propofol <0.5mg/kg/h or midazolam <1.9mg/h) | Day 3 of study (60-84hrs after enrollment) | |
Secondary | Total sedative daily dose change | Change from baseline in total daily dose of all sedatives (in mg of midazolam equivalents) on Day 3 | 24 hours prior to enrollment to Day 3 of the study (60-84hrs after enrollment) | |
Secondary | Total opioid daily dose change | Change from baseline in total daily dose of all opioids (in mcg of fentanyl equivalents) on Day 3 | 24 hours prior to enrollment to Day 3 of the study (60-84hrs after enrollment) | |
Secondary | Adverse event - bradycardia | Incidence of bradycardia (HR <50 or requiring intervention) | Daily from study enrollment until study completion (discharge from ICU, 28 days, or death - whichever is first) | |
Secondary | Adverse event - hypotension | Incidence of hypotension (MAP <60 requiring new vasopressor agents or an increase of >0.1 mcg/kg/min of norepinephrine or epinephrine persisting more than 2h after reducing sedative doses) | Daily from study enrollment until study completion (discharge from ICU, 28 days, or death - whichever is first) | |
Secondary | Adverse event - bronchospasm | Incidence of clinically-important bronchospasm requiring a change in mechanical ventilation settings | Daily from study enrollment until study completion (discharge from ICU, 28 days, or death - whichever is first) | |
Secondary | Adverse event - ECG conduction delays | Incidence of new ECG conduction delays | Daily from study enrollment until study completion (discharge from ICU, 28 days, or death - whichever is first) |
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