Lumbar Puncture Clinical Trial
Official title:
Institutional Review Board Application #13373, Entitled "A Randomized Clinical Trial of Pediatric Lumbar Puncture Success Using The Compass, a Compact Quantitative Pressure Transducer
Objective: To evaluate pediatric emergency department provider lumbar puncture success with
and without the Compass Lumbar Puncture Enhanced, a new pressure transducer, in order to
determine: the proportion of lumbar punctures where a) any cerebrospinal fluid is obtained
on the first attempt, b) any cerebrospinal fluid is obtained on any attempt, and c)
sufficient cerebrospinal fluid is obtained for standard tests (culture, chemistries, cell
count); the time to provider success in obtaining a) a drop of fluid from the needle, and b)
opening pressure measurement; the proportion of successful lumbar punctures that contain
blood; and provider satisfaction.
Background: Lumbar punctures are necessary to diagnose meningitis, neurological diseases and
some cancers. They are common pediatric emergency department procedures that frequently
require repeated attempts or are only partially successful, with sufficient blood to limit
interpretation. Measuring cerebrospinal fluid pressure during lumbar punctures is
recommended but rarely done, due to limitations of current technology. Liquid column
manometry is cumbersome, time-consuming and frequently impractical. Existing pressure
transduction probes that connect via tubing to external monitors are not designed or
recommended for lumbar punctures. The pressure is displayed on a monitor that is difficult
to view during the LP procedure and they equilibrate too slowly to keep pace of pressure
changes during LPs. The Compass Lumbar Puncture Enhanced is a new, inexpensive, disposable,
medical device, specifically designed for use during LPs, that has the potential to increase
lumbar punctures success and decrease blood contamination. It attaches to the spinal needle
and displays both a numeric pressure value and a pressure waveform, allowing physicians to
more readily identify the cerebrospinal fluid space and measure cerebrospinal fluid
pressure. The device is small, easy to use, and readily incorporated into standard practice.
The Compass Lumbar Puncture Enhanced uniquely provides immediate feedback about pressure
that may allow physicians to more quickly and confidently identify the CSF space, and
instantly determine cerebrospinal fluid pressure when the space is reached. The
investigators believe the Compass Lumbar Puncture Enhanced will increase lumbar punctures
success and decrease the proportion containing blood. It has the potential to become the
standard of care and be used in every lumbar puncture procedure. This study is expected to
demonstrate the clinical utility of the Compass Lumbar Puncture Enhanced to the medical
community. Increased awareness of the Compass Lumbar Puncture Enhanced and a positive
demonstration of the viability of the technology will help attract either the investment
capital or the strategic partnership necessary to fully develop the market.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 60 |
Est. completion date | |
Est. primary completion date | January 2012 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | N/A to 18 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Age 0 - 18 years old - Patient was in the Seattle Children's Hospital (SCH) Emergency Department (ED)within 24 hours - Patient requires lumbar puncture (can be performed in the ED or inpatient, within 24 hours of arrival to the ED) - Parent is able to read English or Spanish - A provider who is trained in the use of the Compass device is willing and able to use it during the LP Exclusion Criteria: - Child is a foster child or ward of the state or is unaccompanied by their legal guardian - Child has a lower spine deformity, such as spina bifida, that would impact lP success - The child is pregnant, by verbal report or clinically available test results |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Seattle Children's Hospital | Seattle | Washington |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Seattle Children's Hospital | Life Sciences Development Fund |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Lumbar puncture success | Time to lumbar puncture success. In pediatric patients receiving emergency department care, we aim to evaluate pediatric ED provider LP success with and without the Compass, in order to determine the proportion of LPs where any CSF is obtained on any attempt | 1 minute to 2 hours | No |
Secondary | Obtaining CSF fluid | In pediatric patients receiving emergency department care, we aim to evaluate pediatric ED provider LP success with and without the Compass, in order to determine the proportion of LPs where any CSF is obtained on any attempt | 1 minute to 2 hours | No |
Secondary | Obtain sufficient CSF fluid | In pediatric patients receiving emergency department care, we aim to evaluate pediatric ED provider LP success with and without the Compass, in order to determine the proportion of LPs where sufficient CSF is obtained for standard tests (culture, chemistries and cell count) on any attempt | 1 minute to 2 hours | No |
Secondary | Successful traumatic LPs (contaminated with blood) | In pediatric patients receiving emergency department care, we aim to evaluate pediatric ED provider LP success with and without the Compass, in order to determine the proportion of successful LPs that are traumatic (contaminated with blood) | 1 minute to 2 hours | No |
Secondary | Time to fluid | In pediatric patients receiving emergency department care, we aim to evaluate pediatric ED provider LP success with and without the Compass, in order to determine the time to provider success in obtaining a drop of fluid from the needle | 1 minute to 2 hours | No |
Secondary | Time to LP opening pressure | In pediatric patients receiving emergency department care, we aim to evaluate pediatric ED provider LP success with and without the Compass, in order to determine the time to provider success in obtaining opening pressure measurement | 1 minute to 2 hours | No |
Secondary | Provider satisfaction | In pediatric patients receiving emergency department care, we aim to evaluate pediatric ED provider LP success with and without the Compass, in order to determine provider satisfaction with the procedure +/- device. | 1 minute to 2 hours | No |
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