Hyaline Membrane Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Feasibility Study of A Comparison of Minimally Invasive Surfactant Application Techniques in Preterm Infants
The lungs of infants born too early are extremely underdeveloped. Respiratory Distress
Syndrome (RDS) is a condition that frequently develops in infants born more than 10 weeks
early and leads to the collapse of their lungs. Because the lungs had not had enough time to
mature, they lack a substance, called surfactant that prevents their collapse. To treat this
problem, physicians apply surfactant to the lungs within the first few hours of life by way
of the infant's airway using mechanical stimulation (ventilation). Although this treatment
has significantly decreased the number of infants who die from RDS, the mechanical
ventilation can cause damage to the tiny lungs that may lead to long term lung disease and
breathing problems.
The need for more gentle and less invasive methods of deliver the surfactant to the infant
has led to the development of two new methods that require little or no mechanical
ventilation. While both methods are known to work there is no study that has assessed whether
one method is better than the other or causes fewer complications for the infant. The
proposed study will determine if it is practical to conduct a clinical trial to compare both
methods of surfactant administration and to gather preliminary data on which method gives
better results. Should this study look promising, the resulting data will be used to design a
larger clinical trial to compare the methods of mechanical ventilation. Results of such a
trial would help us to understand the best way to administer surfactant to preterm infants
and thus help doctors to better care for tiny infants at risk of lung disease.
1. The Need for a Trial What is the problem to be addressed? Respiratory distress syndrome
(RDS) is a major clinical challenge affecting 60% of babies born before 30 weeks
gestation and significantly contributes to mortality and morbidity in very preterm
infants, including chronic lung disease and bronchopulmonary dysplasia. Given that the
immature lungs of these tiny infants are developmentally deficient in surfactant,
exogenous surfactant administration might be beneficial to prevent pulmonary
atelectasis. The traditional method in preterm infants is via endotracheal tube
accompanied by mechanical ventilation using positive pressure. The latter predisposes to
permanent lung injury.This study seeks to assess the feasibility of conducting a
large-scale clinical trial to compare two minimally invasive methods of surfactant
administration to very low birth weight preterm infants. As such a comparative study has
not been reported, the proposed study is a pilot trial to test the feasibility of the
study design and to gather preliminary data on the comparison of two methods of
surfactant administration. Results from this study will inform the design of a larger
clinical trial including appropriate power calculation.
Current management of lung disease in preterm infants RDS significantly contributes to
mortality and morbidity in very preterm infants and is, itself, a major determinant of
chronic lung disease (CLD) in the premature infant. One of the most common causes of RDS
is surfactant deficiency; therefore, exogenous surfactant is frequently used for the
treatment of RDS of the preterm infant. Endogenous surfactant is typically produced by
alveolar cells type II and this substance, among other functions, decreases and
modulates the surface tension in the small gas exchanging units of the lung, the
alveoli.1 It has been shown that surfactant treatment is more effective when used within
first hours of life rather than later as rescue therapy. The traditional method of
surfactant administration is via an endotracheal tube where the infant is intubated and
mechanically ventilated, with the latter often resulting in a pulmonary inflammatory
response. This response is known to be a significant contributor to the development of
CLD which is the main pulmonary morbidity, both in the short and long term, associated
with premature birth, thus traditionally supporting the need for mechanical ventilation
in a highly vulnerable phase of lung development. Despite advances in management of
respiratory distress, about 30% of infants born under < 1,000 g still develop CLD -
defined as an oxygen need at 36 weeks postmenstrual age. Some of these infants develop
severe lung disease requiring ventilation and/or supplemental oxygen for months or
years. Significant contributors to this adverse long term outcome of premature birth are
oxidant - and ventilation mediated injury and inflammation, leading to disrupted
alveolarization and septation of the lungs.
One well established therapy to prevent RDS is antenatal administration of steroids to
mothers with imminent preterm birth for induction of lung maturation, a treatment that
has resulted in significant improved outcome following preterm birth. This treatment
results in improved neonatal lung compliance with fewer infants requiring exogenous
surfactant therapy.7 The increasing use of this intervention has led to more infants not
necessarily requiring postnatal surfactant and thus reduced need for mechanical
ventilation, which allows to manage even extreme low birth weight infants with
non-invasive pressure support as CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) to establish
functional residual capacity.
Postnatal non-invasive respiratory support using continuous positive airway pressure
(CPAP) has been shown to be effective in reducing lung damage in several studies,
especially when initiated during the immediate postnatal adaptation period. This results
in fewer days of ventilation and a trend towards a lower risk of CLD, when compared to
intubated and mechanically ventilated controls. However, the number of infants who are
started on CPAP but who ultimately require intubation for the administration of
exogenous surfactant within the first 72 hours remains high in the extremely low birth
weight category. Usually CPAP failure is due to unremitting RDS requiring surfactant
therapy. There is evidence that failing CPAP therapy, defined as need for intubation
within 72 hours of postnatal age, is associated with adverse outcome in infants between
25 to 28 weeks gestation with a higher risk of CLD, death or CLD and necrotizing
enterocolitis. In the same trial infants between 29 and 32 weeks of gestation failing
CPAP were at higher risk of pneumothorax.
In current clinical practice neonatologists are faced with the quandary of avoiding
mechanical positive pressure ventilation, but with the knowledge that surfactant
treatment is more effective in earlier phases of RDS, and that CPAP failure could lead
to higher risk of an adverse outcome. Hence efforts have been made to develop
non-invasive strategies of surfactant application to take advantage of the high efficacy
of this treatment and to decrease duration of mechanical ventilation and subsequent lung
injury. To date, all attempts to produce an effective surfactant for nebulization have
been unsuccessful.
Recent advances in treatment of RDS In 1999, a Swedish group developed the InSurE
procedure of surfactant administration, which involves intubation solely for the purpose
of surfactant administration followed by immediate extubation to CPAP, thereby avoiding
prolonged positive pressure ventilation. A Cochrane systematic review in 2008 concluded
that this method, when compared with later selective surfactant therapy and continued
mechanical ventilation, is associated with less need for mechanical ventilation, lower
incidence of CLD and fewer air leak syndromes. InSurE has been shown to be effective
even if used multiple times in the same patient. Failure of InSurE was associated with
severity of RDS and extremely low birth weight < 750g. The CURPAP trial compared
prophylactic administration of surfactant using the INSURE technique with early CPAP and
early selective surfactant therapy if required. This trial found no difference for the
outcome of mechanical ventilation in the first 5 days of life.
Minimally invasive surfactant application (MISurf) via feeding tube or IV cannula device
is a recently described innovative method of surfactant administration without the need
for positive pressure ventilation. Using the same technique of visualization of the
larynx by direct laryngoscopy as with classical intubation, the respective device is
positioned in the infant's trachea, surfactant is applied, and the device is removed
immediately without mechanical ventilation; If not already on CPAP, the patient is
placed on nasal CPAP immediately following the procedure. In a large open-label multi-
center randomized controlled trial, this method significantly reduced the need for
mechanical ventilation in preterm infants between 26 and 28 weeks of gestation.
What is/are the principal research question(s) to be addressed? This pilot study seeks
to assess the feasibility of conducting a large-scale randomized trial to compare the
two described methods of delivering surfactant, MISURF and INSURE. If this study design
proves feasible, a larger trial would test the hypothesis that early surfactant
administration via feeding tube/ IV cannula device under complete avoidance of
mechanical ventilation as compared to INSURE will decrease the incidence and duration of
invasive ventilation in the whole study population and decrease the incidence of CLD in
infants of 25-28 week gestation.
Why is a trial needed now? Evidence shows that the classical, invasive way of
administering surfactant therapy is associated with serious side effects. This method is
currently the most commonly used in neonatology, including at McMaster. MISurf and
InSurE are the most common minimally invasive surfactant application techniques used in
neonatology; InSurE is considered best practice for minimally invasive application and
MISurf is promising practice. They have been compared to either CPAP therapy or to the
classical way of administering surfactant with some evidence of benefit. No systematic
review exists of randomized trials using minimally invasive surfactant delivery. Our
literature review with search terms of surfactant therapy, minimal invasive surfactant
application, InSurE, comparison, preterm infant, non invasive surfactant application, in
different combinations, has not revealed one trial comparing these two methods directly
with each other. The combination of minimally invasive surfactant application without
mechanical ventilation with early CPAP therapy should offer the best lung protective
strategy. A theoretical counter-argument could be that administering surfactant without
the pressure of the ventilation (MISurf), the distribution of surfactant into the lung
tissue could be less efficient compared to (INSurE) where intubation and surfactant
administration are accompanied by positive pressure ventilation. Hence a comparative
randomized trial will significantly contribute to the evidence and knowledge about the
role of these two minimal invasive strategies for surfactant administration and as such
influence or respectively change practice at Hamilton Health Sciences and beyond. The
outcome of this trial could support the rationale for a multicenter trial throughout
Canada.
Why is a pilot study necessary? As this will be the first study to compare these two
methods, aspects of feasibility have to be tested. The design of the proposed pilot
study is a randomized, two armed intervention trial, with a masked intervention. It is
vital to investigate if the procedures of the trial and masking of intervention are
feasible. Recruitment rate, drop-out rate because of meeting exclusion criteria, refusal
rate, consent- and randomization process, acceptance by clinicians and staff, also need
to be investigated. The results of this pilot trial will inform the sample size
calculation of a larger trial. This pilot will also confirm acceptability of study
inclusion criteria.
Clinical relevance As described above, CPAP therapy alone might lead to unfavorable
outcome in a group of patients using intubation failing this treatment and needing
rescue surfactant therapy. However, undertaking surfactant therapy in all extreme
premature infants is not considered good clinical practice. What is needed is to be able
to identify the patient group who is most likely to benefit from surfactant therapy, and
then to define the optimal time and method of surfactant application. This should lead
to better outcome due to less days of ventilatory treatment, translating in significant
decrease of cost in the short term (one surfactant application costs between 300 to
>1000$, depending on product and country) as well as long term, considering the burden
costs of CLD, with children needing specialist care for the first years of life.
2. The Proposed Trial
Study Design We propose to assess the feasibility of a masked, prospective randomized
controlled trial, with two intervention arms, to compare surfactant application using
the InSurE technique versus the MISurf technique. As early CPAP therapy is currently the
standard of care for patients less than 33 weeks gestation, patients in both arms of the
study will receive this intervention.
What are the planned trial interventions?
1. MISurf: Minimally invasive intratracheal surfactant application without mechanical
ventilation by feeding tube device
2. InSurE: Surfactant application by InSurE strategy (Intubation - surfactant -
extubation sequence).
Both interventions will be performed by intervention teams, comprised of an attending
physician, a neonatal fellow, a respiratory therapist, nurse practitioner and nurses.
The physical visualization and application of surfactant will be performed by the
attending physician or the neonatal fellow, who is part of the intervention team. For
the MISurf intervention, it was decided to use the minimally invasive method via feeding
tube exclusively due to concerns about possibility of airway injury with the iv cannula
device.
Surfactant Two porcine derived surfactant products have been used in the published
trials for minimal invasive surfactant application, Curosurf© and Survanta©. Due to
safety reasons we will use these products also in our pilot study however, only the
latter is currently available in Canada. Hence we will use Survanta© 100 mg/kgBW,
equivalent to 4 ml/kgBW per dose.
Medication Considering the non invasiveness of the procedure, medication (anaesthetic
agents, analgosedation) will not be administered for study interventions.
What are the proposed practical arrangements for allocating participants to trial
groups? This pilot trial will allocate participants to groups using simple randomization
with sealed nontransparent envelopes. Every eligible patient for whom parental consent
has been obtained will be randomized after birth.
What are the proposed methods for protecting against sources of bias?
Details of masking procedure Intervention teams will be established and will be
comprised of health professionals (as above) who are not part of the infants' care team
within the first 3 days of life. The procedure itself will be performed either in a
different room (infant stabilization room (ISR)), or behind a folding screen.
Blinding of health professionals in the circle of care Eligible patients will be
randomized at birth or as soon thereafter as possible, once parental consent has been
obtained. Professionals in the infant's circle of care and those assessing outcome will
be blind to their study group.
What are the planned inclusion/exclusion criteria? Eligible are all preterm infants born
≤ 30 weeks gestation at McMaster Inclusion criteria
- CPAP of 5-6 cm H2O and FiO2≥ 0.35 or CPAP of 7-8 cm of H2O and FiO2≥ 0.30
- Less than 36 hours of age
- Worsening clinical signs of RDS such as retractions (clinical judgment of the
responsible physician) Exclusion Criteria
- Previous Intubation or in imminent need of invasive mechanical ventilation because
of e.g. apnea, severe bradycardia or other deterioration not attributed to RDS,
e.g. shock
- Congenital anomaly or conditions that might adversely affect breathing
- Pneumothorax before intervention
- No parental consent
What is the proposed duration of treatment period? Infants are eligible to enter the
study for intervention within 36h of life. The intervention itself will take 5 to 15
minutes. A second (one repeat) non invasive intervention is allowed in case of a second
surfactant dose to be required.
What is the proposed frequency and duration of follow up? Outcome will be assessed
within first 3 days of life, within 48 hours after intervention and until discharge.
What are the proposed primary and secondary outcome measures?
3. Primary feasibility outcome
• Proportion of included infants who were treated according to protocol
4. Secondary feasibility outcome
- Recruitment rate
- Consent rate
- Proportion of intervention procedures in which masking has not been successful
- Proportion of interventions, when intervention team has not arrived in time leading
to emergency intervention
- Success rate in antenatal approach for consent
5. Primary clinical outcome
Failure rate of the intervention, where failure is defined as:
- Need for invasive ventilation, requiring either FiO2 more than 0.6 or pCO2 more
than 65 mm Hg and pH < 7.20 or both for more than 2 hours after surfactant
administration up to 72 hrs of life
- Intubation/requirement for mechanical ventilation within 48h after first
intervention (same criteria as above)
- For InSurE: Failed extubation within 15 min after intubation for surfactant
application
- SAE during immediate intervention leading to intubation (e.g. severe
bradycardia/resuscitation, pneumothorax)
6. Secondary clinical outcome
- Proportion of infants not requiring the intervention
- Proportion of the following co-morbidities until discharge? - Incidence of grade 3
and 4 IVH (intraventricular hemorrhage), - PVL (periventricular leucomalacia), -
ROP (retinopathy of prematurity) requiring treatment, - NEC (necrotizing
enterocolitis) stage 2 and 3
- Total duration of invasive and non-invasive ventilation (extubation criteria will
follow the extubation- and weaning guidelines), duration of oxygen supplementation
until discharge
- Proportion of patients requiring oxygen supplementation at discharge
- Proportion of surfactant related adverse events like tube blockade, episodes of
desaturation, bradycardia, pulmonary hemorrhage, pneumothorax differ in the two
groups
- Total number of surfactant doses required compared in the two groups
- Incidence of CLD. CLD is assessed as per physiological CLD definition with the
severity score of mild, moderate and severe
- Death
How will the outcome measures be measured at follow up? Clinical outcome data will be
collected from patient medical records by the research coordinator and verified by the
principal investigator. Feasibility outcome data will be documented by the intervention
teams and collected by the research coordinator.
What are the criteria for success of this pilot study? We aim to verify that it will be
possible to perform a large scale clinical trial with this study design. Given that
currently almost 100% of our patients are treated with classical surfactant application,
a rate of >50 % of recruited patients treated according to protocol and a recruitment
and consent rate indicating that a large scale trial with a estimated sample size of 150
to 200 patients within 2 to 3 years can be performed will determine success of this
pilot trial.
Sample size
The sample size was primarily determined based on feasibility considerations. To test
the feasibility of the study design a total of 40 patients (that is, 20 patients in each
arm).In general, we estimate that 200 preterm infants are admitted to McMaster NICU per
year and 40% of these would fulfill the eligibility criteria for this trial. Thus, we
will have sufficient numbers to assess the feasibility of recruitment for the main
trial. Main study:
The sample size will be calculated based on results of the pilot study.
What is the planned recruitment rate? How will the recruitment be organized? Over what
time period will recruitment take place? What evidence is there that the planned
recruitment rate is achievable? Where possible, recruitment will take place antenatally.
The research coordinator will screen the Labour & Delivery high risk patients for
eligibility. Mothers will then be informed of the study and approached for consent, if
they provide consent to contact. A recruitment rate of more than 70% should be
achievable based on previous experience with clinical studies in our unit with this
population. All infants of gestational age < 30 weeks are eligible. Based on the data
for McMaster NICU from Vermont Oxford Network and Canadian Neonatal Network around a
proportion of 40% of these patients is estimated to meet the inclusion criteria for the
intervention.
What is the proposed type of analyses? The reporting of this pilot trial will be in
accordance with the CONSORT Statement (www.consort-statement.org). The demographics and
baseline characteristics of the trial participant will be analyzed using descriptive
statistics reported as mean standard deviation [SD] or median (minimum, maximum) for
continuous variables depending on the distribution, and count (percent) for categorical
variables. The feasibility outcomes will be reported as percentages. For clinical
outcomes, we will use the t-test for comparing groups on continuous outcomes and
chi-squared test for categorical variables. All tests will be performed at alpha = 0.05
level of significance. We will not adjust the overall level of significance for multiple
testing as the tests will be primarily exploratory. All analyses will be performed using
SAS 9.2 (Cary. NC).
What is the proposed frequency of analyses? Interim analysis will be conducted following
inclusion of first 20 patients, which is expected at around 6 months, under the
assumption of a population of 200/year, recruitment rate of 70% and an eligibility rate
for entering one of the intervention arms of 40%.
Safety DSMB: Considering the patient population and the intervention a DSMB will be
established. This will comprise of an external trialist/statistician, an external
neonatologist and an external experienced clinical researcher outside the subject area.
SAEs: SAEs will be captured and reported to DSMB within 24h.
Alternative treatment: There is a considerable amount of patients (around 25%) who will
not require intervention and will remain on CPAP treatment alone.31 The alternative
pathway would be intubation and mechanical ventilation due to various causes of
respiratory failure.
Ethical considerations Full approval of the FHS/HHS REB will be obtained prior to
commencement.
7. Risks to the safety of participants involved in the trial Although this is the first
time these interventions have been compared neither intervention is considered
technically challenging or new. Hence no enhanced risk compared to the classical
surfactant application is expected. The thresholds for intervention are chosen according
to best practice recommendations and similar to other surfactant trials.14-21,26,28,29
Adverse events related to the intervention such as pneumothorax, tube blockage,
pulmonary hemorrhage will be treated with current best practice intensive care as any
other complication. They will be reported as described under 2.15.
8. Informed consent Written informed parental consent will be obtained by the research
coordinator or by a physician who is not involved in the intervention team or the infant
immediate care, when the coordinator is not available. Efforts will be undertaken to
obtain parental consent prenatally. This should be feasible in most cases as more than
80% of the women with imminent preterm birth receive an antenatal consult by Neonatology
and can be informed about the study at that point. When antenatal consent is not
possible, consent will be taken as soon as achievable after birth, if the infant meets
eligibility criteria.
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