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Clinical Trial Summary

This is a study of mechanically ventilated pediatric intensive care unit (ICU) teenage patients and the effects of the medication dexmedetomidine on sleep, delirium, and sedation level. The Investigators will assess sleep with an 8 lead polysomnogram study and increase the medication at night for one night to see if the sleep architecture changes. The Investigators will assess their sleep with our unit's sedation protocol for an additional night.


Clinical Trial Description

Background: Sleep deprivation is a common problem in the intensive care unit (ICU). Poor sleep is both a modifiable risk factor for improved recovery from severe illness and for delirium which is associated with increased mortality (1, 2). Sleep deprivation is a physiological stressor that can affect the autonomic, immune, metabolic, and hormonal functions of the body. Inflammatory cytokines are increased during sleep deprivation and hormonal responses to stress which are already affected by critical illness are worsened with lack of sleep (3, 4). Sedation greatly confounds the ability to distinguish if a patient is asleep or simply deeply sedated particularly in the mechanically ventilated pediatric population. Kudchadkar et.al looked at sleep architecture using limited montage electroencephalogram and saw that sleep was abnormal on sedative infusions although this study did not look at dexmedetomidine infusion (5). However, polysomnography as the gold standard to asses sleep can offer more details about sleep architecture including arousal index. It is well known that sedatives have natural sleep properties, but The Investigators do not have much data on how they impact sleep architecture in the pediatric population. When attempting to describe sleep in the ICU, sleep is inaccurately determined by bedside providers clinically (6-8). The age and severity of illness of intubated pediatric patients them poor candidates for self-reporting using a behavioral scales to describe sleep. Evaluating sleep using polysomnography both removes observer inaccuracy and provides information on the sleep architecture of patients on sedative infusions. Dexmedetomidine is a commonly used infusion for sedation in the ICU that also has natural sleep properties. It is an alpha 2 agonist that acts at the locus coeruleus which is involved in arousal (9). It mimics natural sleep in animal models (10). Dexmedetomidine is commonly used in pediatric intensive care units, although its use has gained increased popularity in the last five years. While some pediatric intensivists cycle, increase the dose at night, of dexmedetomidine to reduce delirium, there is only adult data describing an association between nocturnal dexmedetomidine infusion and reduced delirium (11,12). There are no studies published assessing sleep architecture via polysomnography in pediatric patients on dexmedetomidine infusions. The Investigators aim to assess sleep architecture as well as incidence of delirium in patients who have dexmedetomidine infusions increased during nocturnal hours. It is well established that critically ill children and adults have poor sleep quality and quantity during an ICU stay. Emerging research suggests sleep may improve patient outcomes by mitigating negative effects of the ICU environment such as delirium. Many of the sedatives used in the ICU may disrupt sleep architecture, but pharmacologic studies suggest the sedative dexmedetomidine may improve sleep. Clinical studies in critically ill adults have shown benefit to using dexmedetomidine sedation overnight, or by increasing the dose at night for patients receiving continuously. Pediatric intensivists have started increasing dexmedetomidine infusion doses at night for delirious patients with anecdotal improvements in mental status and delirium state the following day, but no evidence has been published to support this practice. Study: The purpose of this small pilot study is to assess if nocturnal sleep quality and quantity improves with increasing the dose of continuous intravenous infusion of dexmedetomidine exclusively to attain a targeted Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale (RASS) state in intubated and critically ill pediatric patients between the age of 12 and 17 in the pediatric intensive care unit instead of utilizing increasing doses of 2-3 agents with dexmedetomidine being one of them. The FDA has not approved this medication for use in children, so this study will only enroll patients already placed on the medication by their care team as it is already used by this unit in spite of lack of FDA approval for pediatrics. An Investigational New Drug (IND) application was submitted to the FDA and this study was deemed IND exempt (IND 155894). For the control night, the Investigators will make no modifications to the Vanderbilt Children's Hospital approved pediatric intensive care unit sedation protocol. The Investigators will use the same titration and approved maximum doses which are as follows: Initiate fentanyl infusion at 1 mcg/kg/hr and dexmedetomidine infusion at 0.3 mcg/kg/hr, if RASS greater than desired RASS implement the following in order until RASS goal is met. Step 1: Give fentanyl bolus of 1 mcg/kg, reassess in 10 minutes; Step 2: Repeat fentanyl bolus of 1 mcg/kg and increase drip by 1 mcg/kg/hr, reassess in 10 minutes; Step 3: Give dexmedetomidine bolus of 0.5 mcg/kg, reassess in 10 minutes; Step 4: Repeat dexmedetomidine bolus of 0.5 mcg/kg and increase drip by 0.3 mcg/kg/hr, reassess in 10 minutes. Repeat steps 1-4 until goal RASS reached or at max drips (fentanyl 5 mcg/kg/hr and dexmedetomidine 2 mcg/kg/hr). For the intervention night, the Investigators will use the same titration and maximum dose of dexmedetomidine that is Vanderbilt Children's Hospital approved. The Investigators will start the dexmedetomidine where the patients daytime providers have dosed it and titrate to a targeted RASS goal one level deeper. The Investigators will follow the unit titration of using 0.5 mcg/kg bolus and increasing the drip by 0.3 mcg/kg/hr. Reassess RASS 10 minutes later, and if not at desired RASS goal, repeat bolus of 0.5 mcg/kg and increase by 0.3 mcg/kg/hr until either the desired RASS goal is met or a maximum of 2 mcg/kg/hr is reached. The Investigators aim to enroll children who are currently receiving mechanical ventilation and dexmedetomidine infusion for sedation per current pediatric ICU practice and assess the effects of preferentially increasing dexmedetomidine infusion on nocturnal sleep architecture. The Investigators will assess sleep using an 8 lead montage of polysomnography. Each patient will wear the polysomnogram leads for two nights. One of the two nights will follow the intensive care unit sedation protocol (allowing for use of other sedatives as needed) versus increasing the dose of dexmedetomidine to a target Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale state one level deeper than what was targeted during the day. Those interpreting the sleep studies will be blinded to which night was the night that the dexmedetomidine infusion was preferentially increased. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05003102
Study type Interventional
Source Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase Phase 4
Start date February 20, 2023
Completion date June 30, 2023

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