Delirium Clinical Trial
Official title:
Prospective Randomised Controlled Trial of Delirium Management The Central Coast Australia Delirium Intervention Study (CADIS
The typical delirium study between 1989 and 2005 compared delirium management in a specialty unit such as geriatric medicine with delirium management in general medicine (in most cases the research diagnosis of delirium was not communicated to the general medicine group). This study will provide open diagnosis of delirium by the CAM to both the geriatric medicine and general medicine groups (medical staff, patients, families) plus daily monitoring of delirium using digit span and delirium index which is reported to both patient groups. It will also compare confusion assessment method (CAM)to a novel diagnostic system of Paul Regal with respect to hard endpoints (survival and return home). Hypotheses: 1) General medicine can manage delirium as well as geriatric medicine when delirium is openly diagnosed and monitored daily (even in speciality units it is rare to find daily measurement of tools such as delirium index); 2) The Regal diagnostic system will be superior to the CAM in predicting hard endpoints (survival and return home rate for patients living in the community).
Delirium research has been stuck in 1990 with the CAM. Articles appearing in 2012 could have
been written in 1990. The CAM is riddled with logical fallacies such as 1) Circular
reasoning about hearing loss causing delirium - hearing loss causes incorrect answers to
questions on orientation and attention, leading to false positive diagnosis of delirium; 2)
Circular reasoning on dementia causing delirium - dementia often does cause delirium but
behavioral and psychological symptoms of delirium (BPSD) are the most common false positive
diagnosis of delirium. CADIS (Central Coast Australia Delirium Intervention Study) will
compare CAM+ to CAM- age 65+ in emergency department (prevalent delirium). Paul Regal has
already shown that the 8% of 630 elderly he admitted from January 2011 to June 2012 who were
CAM+ had the same survival (hospital, 90 day, 180 day and 12 month) and return home rate
(65%) as 580 CAM negative elderly. The Regal criteria for delirium are completely novel. For
every error in questions, the Regal system forces the examiner to determine if the error is
due to poor hearing or cognitive impairment. A portable amplifier with headphones is used.
The Regal methods uses recent records as the baseline for attention, memory and orientation
questions. For example, an 83 year-old woman was assessed in memory clinic and had digit
span forward 5/5 and 5/6; 5-word recall at 5 minutes in MoCA was 4/5; orientation was 10/10.
Two months later she is admitted for RLL pneumonia and confusion. Digit span declined by 40%
to 3/5, 5-word recall at 5 minutes declined by 100% to 0/5 and orientation declined by 40%
to 6/10. There was no event during the two months such as stroke to explain this decline.
Another novel feature of CADIS is follow-up by a blinded clinical nurse consultant at 30 and
90 days, 12 and 24 months for MoCA, Addenbrooke Cognitve Assessment and four tests from
CANTABeclipse (Cambridge Cognition) touchscreen laptop. The hypothesis is that "persistent
delirium" is due primarily to irreverible brain events such as ischemic stroke.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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