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Clinical Trial Summary

Delirium is the most often encountered psychiatric diagnosis in the general hospital, with incidence up to 85% in the intensive care unit (ICU) setting and with significant consequences on patients' morbidity and mortality. Currently, although not FDA approved, antipsychotics are often considered the first-line pharmacological treatment. However, there can be limitations to their use, including side effects or lack of efficacy. Valproic acid (VPA) is one of the alternatives at times used in such patients which from limited case series data appears to be helpful and tolerated. VPA can provide relief from agitation that poses a threat to the safety and recovery of the patient. Moreover, mechanistically it addresses the neurochemical and cellular abnormalities inherent in delirium (it has NMDA-antagonist, anti-dopaminergic, GABAergic,anti-inflammatory, anti-apoptotic, and histone deacetylase inhibitor properties, among others). The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of the VPA in the first known to us randomized controlled trial.


Clinical Trial Description

The investigators plan to investigate the efficacy and tolerability of scheduled VPA as compared to placebo with as needed basis (PRN) haloperidol (as a back-up in both arms) for treatment of hyperactive or mixed delirium. Patients will be randomized to scheduled VPA or placebo (normal saline) and both arms will have flexible PRN dosing of haloperidol. Thus, the investigators plan to learn the time to delirium resolution in patients treated with VPA versus placebo; percentage of patients responding to VPA versus placebo; tolerability of VPA versus placebo. If addition of scheduled VPA proves to shorten time to delirium resolution as compared to placebo, lead to less use of haloperidol, and/or have fewer side effects, it would provide a very important addition to our limited evidence-based repertoire of delirium treatment. Moreover, this pilot study would then pave the way for the bigger randomized control trial powered to detect its effect size. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02343575
Study type Interventional
Source Stanford University
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase Phase 4
Start date January 2015
Completion date January 2018

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Not yet recruiting NCT03621228 - MindfulGarden in Treatment of Hyperactive Delirium in a Hospital Setting N/A
Recruiting NCT03215745 - Delirium Prevention in Patients From the Intensive Care Unit (DELA) N/A
Recruiting NCT04824144 - Effects of Dexmedetomidine in Patients With Agitated Delirium in Palliative Care Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04833023 - HALO Trial: Haloperidol vs Olanzapine in Hyperactive Delirium in Palliative Care Patients; A Multi-Centre, Randomised-Controlled Trial Phase 3
Withdrawn NCT04513314 - Valproate Alone or in Combination With Quetiapine for Severe COVID-19 Pneumonia With Agitated Delirium Phase 4
Completed NCT03954769 - A Pilot Study of "Stanford Proxy Test for Delirium" (S-PTD)
Completed NCT05690698 - Quetiapine Versus Haloperidol in the Management of Hyperactive Delirium Phase 3