Hypoxia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Video-guided Percutaneous Tracheostomy (PCT): Evaluating the Safety, Efficacy and Simplicity of a Novel Technique
The purpose of this study is to determine the feasibility, safety and effectiveness of an endotracheal tube embedded with a mini video-camera as a guiding tool for percutaneous tracheostomy.
Background
Percutaneous tracheostomy (PCT) is commonly used in the intensive care unit (ICU) for
critically-ill patients who require long-term mechanical ventilation. In experienced hands,
and with proper patient selection, it is safe, easy and quick, and the associated
perioperative complication rate can be reduced to approximately 4% [1-7]. However, skilled
intensivist may not always be available, and the procedure may sometimes entail
complications. These include paratracheal insertion of the tracheostomy tube, tracheal
injury; puncturing the cuff and transfixing the endotracheal tube (ETT) during the
transtracheal needle insertion; inserting the guide wire through Murphy's eye; or accidental
extubation while withdrawing the endotracheal tube during the procedure leading to loss of
the airway [8-13].
Although using the fingertip to palpate the trachea and endotracheal tube is a useful
technique to locate the tip of the endotracheal tube during the procedure, it is unreliable,
particularly in patients with short and thick necks. Bronchoscopic guidance of PCT is
generally recommended to minimize the risk of unintentional tracheal injury. The use of a
fibreoptic bronchoscope may be helpful [14-18]. However, it is an expensive tool which is
not readily available in some centers. Video guidance provides a cost-effective alternative
to bronchoscopes, that may also reduce the risk of procedure-related complications such as
paratracheal insertion of the tracheostomy tube, tracheal injury or cuff puncture [19].
The goal of this study is to observe and describe a simple and safe technique - Video-guided
PCT - that may overcome some of the limitations of percutaneous tracheostomy, to report any
potentially-related complications that may occur during or after the procedure, and to
portray a learning curve obtained with this technique.
The equipment used for this technique is the ETView TVTTM, a commercially available ETT,
embedded with a mini video-camera at the tip of the tube. It provides direct endoscopic
visualization of the larynx and tracheal mucosa, and thereafter allows the determination of
the tip of the transtracheal needle during percutaneous puncture of the trachea, and hence
may reduce the likelihood of paratracheal insertion, tracheal injury, or other technical
complications.
The ETView TVTTM device is compatible with any medical grade NTSC video monitor, thereby it
provides monitoring of the airways during the intubation and PCT procedure, as well as
continuous viewing of the airways as long as mechanical ventilation is required
(www.etview.com).
Study Objectives
To observe a new bedside technique of video-guided PCT, to report any potentially-related
complications, and to construct learning curves based on the operative time and complication
rate.
Study design
The study will be conducted as a prospective observational one. The setting will be the ICU
of the Sourasky medical center. 10 consecutive adult critically ill patients who require
elective tracheostomy will be recruited for the study. Informed consent will be obtained
from the families or next of kin of all study patients. In the absence of relatives, consent
will be given by an anesthesiologist/intensivist not related to the study. The procedure
will be performed by the same team of intensivists upon all study patients. During and
following the procedure we will assess the complication rate, operative time, and
operability of the procedure (see "procedure & follow-up" section).
Methods
The procedure
The procedure will be performed by an ICU team which includes: an
anesthesiologist/intensivist who executes the procedure, another anesthesiologist who
applies anesthetics & analgesia, a nurse, and a forth person who takes time.
During the procedures oxygen saturation, end tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO2), ECG, blood
pressure, and arterial blood gases will be monitored continuously.
The video-guided PCT procedure requires extubation and re-intubation with the TVTTM tube,
which will be mentioned in the consent form.
Re-intubation with the TVTTM tube will be performed as any commonly practiced intubation.
The ETView Tracheoscopic system (TVTTM) consists of an ETT, embedded with a video imaging
device and a light source at its tip and an integrated cable with a connector, that may be
wired to any video monitor.
The imaging system will be used to monitor the airways while intubating and, beyond the
vocal cords, to locate the transtracheal insertion site and needle. In addition, the light
source will serve for transillumination of the neck soft tissues, in order to delineate the
tracheal curvature and identify anatomical deviations.
Anesthesia and analgesia will be routinely performed, and standardized for all the study
patients. Low doses of the opiate fentanyl (2-3 μg/kg) and the short-acting sedative
propofol (20 mg bolus, and 3-6mg/kg/h drip) will be administered at the beginning of the
procedure. Rocuronium bromide, a brief acting muscle paralyzer, 0.6mg/kg, will also be used
in most patients.
Patient follow-up
The executing physician will answer a questionnaire evaluating the intraprocedural
difficulties, complications, feasibility, confidence, and operability, and will follow-up
the patients during the first 6h after the procedure, or until discharge. Follow-up will
include documentation of any procedure-related complications, monitoring of
respiratory/ventilatory parameters and length of stay (LOS) in the ICU beyond 6h (due to
medical circumstances related to the procedure).
All study patients will be placed with arterial lines through which we withdraw blood before
and after the procedure, and when indicated by deterioration of respiratory parameters - for
blood gas analyses (PaO2/FiO2, PaCO2, pH and BE). In addition, saturation will be documented
hourly. All patients will also have chest x-rays performed immediately following
tracheostomy.
The questionnaire will include a check-list listing procedure-related complications, through
which we will evaluate the total number of complications. These include:
A. Technical complications: False route/paratracheal insertion, injury to a thoracic vessel,
tracheal/laryngeal/esophageal injury, accidental decannulation, puncturing the cuff,
inserting the guide wire through Murphy's eye, malpositioning or kinking of the tracheal
cannula, failed trachestomy, multiple punctures (≥3).
B. Clinical complications potentially related to the procedure:
B.1. Intraprocedural: significant endotracheal bleeding and transfusion requirements (RBC,
FFP or platelets), transient hypoxia/hypoxemia, hemodynamic changes (e.g., transient
hypotension not related to anesthetics).
B.2. Postprocedure: alterations in respiratory function (defined as >15% reduction in
saturation or PaO2/FiO2, compared to baseline; Increased PaCO2 without change in saturation;
the need to change ventilatory settings and/or add PEEP within the first 24 hrs),
atelectasis, pneumothorax, pneumomediastinum, aspiration, early unexplained mortality
(within the first 24 hrs).
Other parameters they will be asked to evaluate will be: whether the transtracheal needle
was recognized via the TVTTM (yes/no); intraoperative difficulties; level of confidence;
ease of performance ("best practice"); and need to convert to surgical tracheostomy
procedure.
In addition, a member of the team will measure operative time, which includes the total
duration of the procedure; the time it took to recognize the tracheal insertion site and
needle; and the time since ETT placement and until successful tracheal placement is
confirmed via air bubbles or ETCO2.
The complication rate and operative time will be used to construct a learning curve for the
executing intensivist.
;
Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Supportive Care
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