Critical Illness Clinical Trial
— EMERALDOfficial title:
A Multi-centre, Randomised, Pilot Feasibility Study to Compare the Effectiveness of Eye-movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing Versus Usual Care in the Psychological Recovery of Intensive Care Survivors
The goal of this multi-centre, randomised, pilot feasibility study is to assess the feasibility of recruiting intensive care survivors, with symptoms of traumatic stress, to a study evaluating the use of eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR). The main purpose is to determine whether it is feasible and acceptable to patients, clinicians and researchers. In addition, this study aims to identify design criteria that may be of use in a subsequent randomised controlled trial of clinical effectiveness. Participants will: - be recruited at hospital discharge - undergo a psychological assessment at 2-3 months post-hospital discharge - Those exhibiting symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), will be randomised (1:1) to receive either usual care or usual care plus EMDR - Participants who do not exhibit PTSD symptoms at the 2-3 month assessment will enter a light-touch observation arm. - All participants will repeat the psychological assessment 12-months after hospital discharge. Feasibility parameters; recruitment, adherence, retention and safety data. Primary clinical outcomes; change in PTSD symptoms between 2-3 months and 12-months. The investigators will undertake a qualitative process evaluation using clinical ethnography and reported according to the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 160 |
Est. completion date | February 2025 |
Est. primary completion date | February 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Survivors of an intensive care admission, who have received level 3 care for >24 hours. - Aged =18 years - Capacity to provide informed consent and complete trial interventions and assessments. Exclusion Criteria: - Pre-existing cognitive impairment such as dementia - Pre-existing diagnosis of psychosis - Not expected to survive post-hospital discharge - Traumatic brain injury |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | University Hospitals Dorset | Poole | Dorset |
United Kingdom | University Hospital Southampton | Southampton | Hampshire |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust | National Institute for Health Research, United Kingdom |
United Kingdom,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Recruitment, adherence, retention | To determine whether investigating the use of EMDR for traumatised survivors of critical care can reach predefined feasibility objectives:
Recruitment rate part A - we anticipate an average recruitment of 10 patients per month across the three participating sites. This is well above the median recruitment of 0.95 participants recruited per site per month, reported in a review of trials listed in the NIHR journals library (1997-2020)(31). Consent rate - number of patients recruited, expressed as a percentage of patients approached. Based on our previous work we expect this to be greater than 30%(28). Adherence will be determined by completion of =75% of planned EMDR sessions completed. Retention will be determined by =75% of participants completing the study follow-up assessment. |
12-months | |
Primary | Acceptability | To explore acceptability of participating in a Randomised Controlled Trail of EMDR for critical care survivors, psychology clinicians and research staff. Reported according to the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability. This qualitative methodology, using semi-structured interviews, provides a framework for assessing conceptually different constructs of acceptability in clinical trials; affective attitude, burden, ethicality, intervention coherence, opportunity costs, perceived effectiveness and self-efficacy. | 12-months | |
Primary | Number of participants with adverse events (safety and tolerability) | Safety will be determined by assignment of causality of serious events. Events attributable to trial procedures will be reviewed by trial management board, study sponsor and the research ethics committee, in order to determine ongoing feasibility. | 12-months | |
Secondary | Post-traumatic stress disorder | Change in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptom severity using the Impact of Events Scale-Revised. (IES-R) The IES-R is a 22-question, patient reported outcome measure widely used to assess symptoms of PTSD, including in critical care research, and is recommended by critical care core outcome dataset developers and the International Conference of Harmonisation of Outcome Measures. The questions cover symptoms of intrusion, avoidance and hyperarousal. Participants indicate how distressing the symptoms have been over the last 7 days. Symptom severity can be 0 (not at all), 1 (a little bit), 2 (moderately), 3 (quite a bit), 4 (extremely), giving a total scoring range of 0 to 88, with higher scores indicating more severe symptoms. | 12-months | |
Secondary | Clinician assessed Post-traumatic stress disorder | To determine changes in symptoms of PTSD, participants will undergo the Clinician administered PTSD scale (CAPS-5) assessment at 2- and 12-months post-hospital discharge.
CAPS-5 is a 30-question structured interview, exploring severity and duration of PTSD symptoms, index trauma, subjective distress and impact on social and occupational functioning. Each question refers to PTSD symptoms and can be rated; 0=absent; 1=mild/sub-threshold; 2=moderate/threshold; 3=severe/markedly elevated; 4=extreme/incapacitating. Scores from questions 1-20 will be combined to give an overall severity ranging, with high scores reflecting worse symptoms. In addition, the investigators will sum individual symptoms relating to symptom clusters from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of mental disorder; (5th Ed) |
12-months | |
Secondary | Sensitivity analysis | To determine whether PTSD symptom severity and diagnoses, identified by patent reported Impact of Events Scale-Revised, correspond with those identified by Clinician administered PTSD Scale-5. | 12-months | |
Secondary | Anxiety | Generalised Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7): this 7-question, self-administered tool is validated to assess for anxiety symptom severity. Scores are calculated by assigning 0 for 'not at all, 1- 'several days', 2 - 'more than half the days' or 3 - 'nearly every day' for responses to nine questions, giving a score in the range 0-21. GAD-7 scores of 5, 10 and 15 represent cut-offs for mild, moderate and severe anxiety respectively. | 12-months | |
Secondary | Depression | Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9): this self-administered, validated tool assesses depressive symptom severity. Scores are calculated by assigning 0 for 'not at all, 1- 'several days', 2 - 'more than half the days' or 3 - 'nearly every day' for responses to nine questions, giving a score in the range 0-27. PHQ-9 score of 0-4 demonstrates no - minimal depression severity. 5-9 = mild severity, 10-14 = moderate severity, 15-19 = moderately severe, 20-27 = severe. | 12-months | |
Secondary | Health related quality of life | EuroQol Five Dimension- Five level scale (EQ5D -5L): comprises five quality-of-life dimensions; mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort and anxiety/depression. Participants report levels ranging from 'no problems' to 'extreme problems'. | 12-months | |
Secondary | Clinical Global Impression of Improvement (CGI-I) | The Clinical Global Impression of improvement can be used to assess symptom severity and response to treatment. It requires a clinician to rate the severity of a patient's mental illness, relative to other patients that the clinician has seen, who have the same diagnosis. The 7-point scale ranges from; 1 - normal, not at all ill, 2 - borderline mentally ill, 3 - mildly ill, 4 - moderately ill, 5 - markedly ill, 6 - severely ill, 7 - among the most extremely ill patients. | 12-months |
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