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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02515123
Other study ID # PROPEL (ICU-02)
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
First received
Last updated
Start date February 2016
Est. completion date July 4, 2019

Study information

Verified date July 2019
Source E-Motion Medical Ltd.
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Early enteral feeding is a key component of the management of critically ill patients receiving mechanical ventilation. However, enteral feeding has been associated with serious complications such as gastro-esophageal reflux, with both overt and micro pulmonary aspiration, which potentially increases the risk to nosocomial pneumonia. Many critically ill patients experience poor tolerance of early enteral nutrition because of impaired gastric motility, which leads to a sequence of delayed gastric emptying, increased gastric volume, gastro esophageal reflux, vomiting, aspiration, and VAP. Early and adequate enteral feeding in ICU patients is correlated with decreased overall infections rates, ventilator and intensive care unit (ICU) days, costs, and mortality.

This study is intended to assess the efficacy and safety of the E-Motion System (i.e. E-Motion tubeTM and E-Motion EPG 1000TM) in improving tolerance to enteral nutrition by inducing esophageal motion by means of electrical stimulation in ICU patients.


Description:

Malnutrition in the ICU is a known cause for increased morbidity and mortality and providing artificial nutrition is part of standard care in ICUs worldwide. While malnutrition is a risk factor for adverse outcomes related to critical illness, what is more difficult to prove is the value of optimal amounts of nutrition. Nevertheless, large-scale observational studies of critically ill patients suggest that optimal amounts and timely provision of nutritional intake is associated with reduced infectious complications, duration of mechanical ventilation, and mortality, along with perceptions of faster physical recovery. Smaller RCTs demonstrate that greater nutrition intake is associated with improved weaning from mechanical ventilation while larger RCTs do suggest non-significant improvements in long-term physical functional performance (6 minute walk test at 12 months) and a significant improvement in 60-day quality of life. In contrast, there are large-scale RCTs that fail to demonstrate a positive treatment effect of enhanced nutritional intake. However, these trials have been criticized for study heterogeneous groups of low 'nutritional-risk' patients. Patients who benefit the most from optimal nutritional supplementation are high-nutritional risk. Recent data suggests that tolerating 80% of the prescribed amounts of protein and calories is associated with improved clinical outcome and may serve as a quality indicator for ICU practice. Currently, around the world, more than 75% of nutritionally-high risk patients are systematically underfed receiving less than 80% of prescribed amounts. Thus, the investigators conclude that greater efforts to improve nutrition intake in ICU patients are warranted.

Early enteral nutrition (EN) is supported by mechanistic data delineating its physiologic effects, which provide both non-nutritional and nutritional benefits to the critically ill patient. EN should be started as soon as possible following admission to the ICU in order to achieve the non-nutritional benefits and minimize the development of a protein-calorie deficit that frequently occurs during the first week of critical illness. The non-nutritional benefits are derived from several physiologic mechanisms that maintain structural and functional gut integrity, preventing increases in intestinal permeability. Immune mechanisms elicited by EN result in attenuation of oxidative stress and the inflammatory response while supporting the humoral immune system. Enteral feeding modulates metabolic responses that help decrease insulin resistance. The nutritional benefits are derived from delivery of exogenous nutrients, which provide sufficient protein and calories, deliver micronutrients and antioxidants, and maintain lean body mass.

Because many factors impede delivery of early EN in the ICU setting, patients routinely get approximately 50% of the calories and protein that are required. Our mission, at E-Motion Medical, is to improve outcome for critically ill patients by lowering their risk of infection and enabling them to have better nutritional intake. To achieve that, novel technology was developed that reduces gastric reflux and promotes GI motility, via electric stimulation to the esophageal mucosa. The investigators believe our technology will improve gastric emptying, reduce reflux and aspiration of gastric content, and enable more adequate delivery of enteral nutrition to critically-ill patients predisposed to delayed gastric emptying.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 158
Est. completion date July 4, 2019
Est. primary completion date February 15, 2018
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years to 85 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

1. Male or female, 18-85 years of age.

2. Patient is receiving a moderate to high dose of opioids, either continuously or intermittently and is expected to remain on opioids for an additional 48 hours from point of screening. By moderate to high dose, we mean at least 2 mg/h (or 48 mg/day) of morphine or equivalent (e.g., 20 µg/h fentanyl and 0.5 mg/h of hydromorphone).

3. Mechanically ventilated and expected to remain alive and invasively mechanically ventilated for an additional 48 hours or longer from the point of screening.

4. Receiving EN or prescribed to receive EN.

5. Written informed consent obtained from legal representative (the subject will not be competent to give it on their own).

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Mechanical ventilation start time in your ICU to time of screening is more than 72 hours

2. Subject has a history of or had undergone esophageal or gastric surgery on this admission (lower abdominal surgery will not result in exclusion unless it carries a contraindication to enteral feeding).

3. Subject has a contraindication to enteral feeding (i.e., ongoing bowel obstruction or perforation).

4. Subject requires small bowel feeding at point of screening.

5. Subject requires feeding tube placed operatively or percutaneously.

6. Subject requires total parenteral nutrition at point of screening.

7. Subject has a known diagnosis of gastroparesis requiring outpatient motility agents (e.g. diabetic gastroparesis).

8. Subject has contraindication to oro/nasogastric tube insertion, e.g. esophageal tumors, laryngectomy, etc.

9. Subject with known esophageal varices.

10. Subject has admission diagnosis of gastroesophageal bleeding requiring transfusions.

11. Subject is implanted with a cardiac pacemaker ; temporary pacemaker or is pacemaker dependent ; or implantable defibrillator.

12. Subject has a gastric pacemaker.

13. Subject is prescribed to have NAVA tube or has one in place.

14. Subject is suffering from life-threatening arrhythmia (atrial fibrillation [AF} with rapid ventricular response; sustained VT; ventricular fibrillation [VF]; cardiac arrest; any cardiac arrhythmia that may cause the patient to be hemodynamically instable); severe cardiomyopathy diagnosed clinically or severe congestive heart disease (NYHA 3/4).

15. Subjects with severe hepatic failure (e.g. Child Pugh class C cirrhosis) or acute fulminant hepatic failure. Gilbert's syndrome or asymptomatic gallstones will not result in exclusion.

16. A requirement for continuous EEG monitoring at the time of screening

17. Lactating or pregnant females as determined by positive serum or urine hCG test prior to enrolment.

18. Concomitant participation in another randomized trial of a novel biological or device (non-industry sponsored or academic randomized trials and observational studies are suitable for co-enrolment).

19. Previous randomization in this study.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Device:
E-Motion System
E-Motion Tube: A disposable oro/nasogastric feeding tube fitted with stainless steel electrodes along its length that delivers the stimulation to the esophageal mucosa. E-motion EPG 1000: a durable, touchscreen operated, bedside control unit that generates the electric stimulation pattern and sends it via the feeding tube to the esophagus. By applying predetermined sequences of electrical stimulation to various locations along the esophagus asynchronous esophageal motion is induced, resulting is reduction of reflux and increased GI motility, enabling safer and better feeding.
Sham E-Motion System
The sham EPG will resemble the investigational EPG. The external shape, interface, lights, and switches will be exactly the same. The Sham device will emit a low intensity pulsation so that, it will not unblind the patient nor health care professional. In the event that unblinding does occur, we will take steps to mask the identity of the EPG by covering the number of the device with tape to prevent members of the clinical team becoming aware of which device is active or sham.

Locations

Country Name City State
Canada Royal Alexandria Hospital Edmonton Alberta
Canada Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre Halifax Nova Scotia
Canada London Health Sciences London Ontario
Canada Hopital Maisonneuve-Rosemont Montreal Quebec
Canada Hopital Sacre-Coeur Montreal Quebec
Canada Montreal General Hospital Montreal Quebec
Canada Ottawa OHRI Ottawa Ontario
Canada Hoptial L'ENfant Jesus Quebec City Quebec
Canada University of Sherbrooke Fleurimont Sherbrooke Quebec
Canada Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre Toronto Ontario
Canada St. Boniface Hospital Winnipeg Manitoba

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
E-Motion Medical Ltd. Clinical Evaluation Research Unit at Kingston General Hospital

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Canada, 

References & Publications (3)

Alberda C, Gramlich L, Jones N, Jeejeebhoy K, Day AG, Dhaliwal R, Heyland DK. The relationship between nutritional intake and clinical outcomes in critically ill patients: results of an international multicenter observational study. Intensive Care Med. 2009 Oct;35(10):1728-37. doi: 10.1007/s00134-009-1567-4. Epub 2009 Jul 2. Erratum in: Intensive Care Med. 2009 Oct;35(10):1821. — View Citation

Heyland DK, Cahill N, Day AG. Optimal amount of calories for critically ill patients: depends on how you slice the cake! Crit Care Med. 2011 Dec;39(12):2619-26. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0b013e318226641d. — View Citation

Heyland DK, Stephens KE, Day AG, McClave SA. The success of enteral nutrition and ICU-acquired infections: a multicenter observational study. Clin Nutr. 2011 Apr;30(2):148-55. doi: 10.1016/j.clnu.2010.09.011. Epub 2010 Oct 25. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Pepsin concentration Pepsin concentration in samples taken daily by ETA (ELISA immunoassay), indicating presence of gastric content in lungs. 7 days
Other microbiological analysis of endotracheal aspirates Bacterial culture in samples taken daily by ETA. 7 days
Other ICU Length of Stay Number of days from admission to the ICU until discharge from the ICU. 28 days
Other Pneumonia Pneumonia infection, as determined by the PI 28 days
Other Ventilator Free Days Ventilator-free days (number of days alive and free of mechanical ventilation in the first 28 days). 28 days
Other Parenteral Nutrition Daily delivery of parenteral nutrition calories and/or protein administered. 7 days
Primary Adequacy of enteral nutrition The primary endpoints for this study are the average daily delivery of enteral nutrition in percentage of the amount of calories and protein prescribed for the patient). 7 days
Secondary Time from intervention start to delivery of 80% prescribed energy and protein Time (in days) from start of intervention up to delivery of 80% of the calories and/or protein prescribed to the patient in a given day. 7 days
Secondary Proportion of subjects achieving >80% enteral nutrition intake Percent of subjects achieving enteral nutrition intake greater than 80% of the amount of calories and/or protein prescribed for the patient each day. 7 days
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