Laryngeal Edema Clinical Trial
— COMICOfficial title:
Cuff Leak Test and Airway Obstruction in Mechanically Ventilated ICU Patients Pilot Trial
NCT number | NCT03372707 |
Other study ID # | 20170701 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Completed |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | July 5, 2018 |
Est. completion date | July 1, 2019 |
Verified date | August 2022 |
Source | McMaster University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Introduction: Endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation are lifesaving interventions that are commonly done in the intensive care unit (ICU). The act of intubating someone can cause laryngeal edema (LE) that, if extensive enough, can cause airway obstruction after a patient is extubated. To date, the only test that is available to predict this complication is the cuff leak test (CLT). However, its diagnostic accuracy is uncertain as there have been no randomized controlled trials (RCT) examining this. The Cuff leak and airway Obstruction in Mechanically ventilated ICU patients (COMIC) Randomized Control Trial will be done to examine the impact of CLT on postextubation stridor and reintubation. Subsequently, describing the diagnostic accuracy of this test. Methods: This will be a multi-center centered, pragmatic, double blinded RCT. Mechanically ventilated patients in the ICU, who are deemed ready to be extubated will be included. All patients will have a CLT done prior to extubation. The results of the CLT in the intervention arm will be communicated to the treating physician, and decision to extubate will be left to the treating team, while the results of the CLT for patients in the control arm will not be communicated to the treating physician, and the patient will be extubated, regardless of the result of the CLT. Objective: This is a pilot trial to assess feasibility of conducting a powered RCT. Feasibility outcomes include: consent rate, recruitment rate, and protocol adherence. Clinical outcomes will include postextubation stridor, reintubation, emergency surgical airway, ICU mortality, in hospital mortality, duration of mechanical ventilation, and ICU length of stay in days.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 100 |
Est. completion date | July 1, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | May 1, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Eligible patients will be mechanically ventilated adults (>18 years) who are admitted to the ICU and an order to extubate has been provided by the treating physician. Exclusion Criteria: 1. A palliative care, a one-way extubation, or a decision to withdraw advances life support order has been written. 2. Pregnancy. 3. Patients at high risk for LE: burn patients, smoke inhalation injuries (as defined as singed facial hair or nasal hair, carbonaceous secretions/sputum, and known to be in an enclosed fire), blunt or penetrating trauma involving the neck and airway, postoperative head and neck surgeries, and patients admitted with airway edema to the ICU (e.g; anaphylaxis). 4. Patients with either a difficult or traumatic endotracheal intubation. 5. Patients receiving mechanical ventilation via tracheostomy. 6. Known preexisting tracheolaryngeal abnormalities such as: vocal cord paralysis, tracheolaryngeal neoplasm, tracheomalacia, tracheolaryngeal stenosis, or previous head and neck surgeries. 7. Patients receiving systemic corticosteroids of greater than 30 mg of PO prednisone or equivalent, within 4 days prior to the decision to extubate. 8. Patients who failed extubation attempt within the current ICU admission. 9. History of postextubation airway obstruction. 10. The ICU physician declined enrolling the patient. 11. Patient had a failed CLT in the previous 24 hours. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | St Joseph's Hospital | Hamilton | Ontartio |
Poland | Jagiellonian University Medical College | Kraków | Lesser Poland |
Saudi Arabia | Imam Adbulrahman Bin Faisal University | Dammam | Eastern Province |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
McMaster University |
Canada, Poland, Saudi Arabia,
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Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Consent Rate | A successful consent rate will be defined as 70% of substitute decision makers (SDMs) or patients approached to consent, choosing to participate in the trial. This will be calculated as the overall proportion of SDMs or patients consenting out of those approached (with 95% CI). Note that a mixed consent model will be obtained. In Canada and Saudi Arabia, a priori or deferred consent model will be used. In Poland, a waved consent model will be used. | 1 year | |
Primary | Recruitment Rate | A successful recruitment rate will be defined as achieving enrollment of 40 patients, conventionally expressed as four patients per month over the duration of the trial. While the pilot trial is ongoing, recruitment will be reviewed weekly and the screening records will be reviewed monthly with the cases of missed eligible patients reviewed. If applicable, barriers to enrollment will be addressed to maximize recruitment. The recruitment metric will be measured and interpreted at the end of the pilot trial by calculating the mean number of recruited patients per active screening month. | 1 year | |
Primary | Protocol Adherence | Successful adherence will be defined as =80%. The adherence will be calculated as the proportion of patients that were assigned to the control arm being extubated after CLT being performed and the portion of people that assigned to the intervention arm who are given the prescribed steroids for a failed CLT. As this pilot trial is ongoing, investigators will review adherence monthly and investigate the reasons for compliance failure. All reasons for either failure to extubate after a failed CLT in the control arm will be investigated. The RC will review the Respiratory Therapists' notes, and the medication profile to determine actual compliance. All reasons for non-compliance will be recorded for both groups using distinguishing clinical reasons (eg. Palliation, death, consent withdrawal, errors). | 1 year | |
Secondary | Postextubation stridor | Defined as an audible high pitched inspiratory noise caused by turbulent airflow through the narrowed airway that is detectable with or without a stethoscope within 48 hours of extubation. | 48 hours after original extubation | |
Secondary | Clinically significant postextubation stridor | Defined as stridor (see definition above) that requires medical intervention such as the administration of systemic steroids, racemic epinephrine, or Heli-ox. | 48 hours after original extubation | |
Secondary | Reintubation | Defined as reintubation within 72 hours of original extubation while in the ICU. | 72 hours after original extubation | |
Secondary | Emergency surgical airway | Defined as performing urgent tracheotomy or cricothyroidotomy for a life-threatening airway obstruction | 30 days | |
Secondary | In ICU mortality | 1 year | ||
Secondary | In hospital mortality truncated at 30 days | 30 days | ||
Secondary | Duration of mechanical ventilation | Defined as time on the ventilator after randomization in days. | 1 year | |
Secondary | ICU length of stay in days | 1 year |
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Recruiting |
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