Acute Hypercapnic Respiratory Failure Clinical Trial
— ReAcTCO2Official title:
Noninvasive Monitoring for Noninvasive Ventilation: Use of Transcutaneous Carbon Dioxide Monitoring to Guide Acute Noninvasive Ventilation in Patients With Acute Hypercapnic Respiratory Failure: A Multicenter Study
Verified date | December 2022 |
Source | Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Arterial blood sampling is needed to monitor carbon dioxide and PH but is often painful. The aim of this study is to determine whether continuous carbon dioxide monitoring with a skin probe reduces the need for arterial blood sampling by at least 30%. The investigators will also study the safety and effectiveness of skin probe monitoring to manage non-invasive ventilation (NIV).
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 60 |
Est. completion date | February 10, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | February 7, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Patients aged18 years and over with hypercapnia, requiring acute NIV and who are admitted to the Emergency Department or Medical HDU and, who need arterial blood sampling for clinical reasons. - Recruited ideally within 4 hours (but no later than 8 hours) of initiation of acute NIV in hospital. Exclusion Criteria: - Reduced level of consciousness or agitation. - Metabolic or mixed acidosis, serum bicarbonate < 24 mmol/L. - Haemodynamic instability or reduced skin perfusion. - Patients requiring more than 6litres/min (ormorethan60%) inspired oxygen through ventilator to maintain SpO2 of 88-92%. - Need for multi-organ support e.g. inotropes or vasopressors or renal replacement therapy - Arterial pH equal or less than 7.1 or carbon dioxide levels >15kPa as they are at risk of NIV failure and likely to require mechanical ventilation. - Participating in any other interventional study |
Country | Name | City | State |
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n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
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Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust |
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Average number of arterial blood gases per participant over the study period | the total (Scheduled and unscheduled) arterial blood samples over 72 hours per participant in each group . | over the study period of 72 hours per participant | |
Primary | number of unscheduled arterial blood sample in each group | arterial blood sampling needed for clinical deterioration or due to unreliability of transcutaneous CO2 monitoring for each patient | over the study period of 72 hours per participant | |
Primary | number of instances where transcutaneous monitoring was unreliable and arterial blood gas sampling was needed. | Clinicians will complete questionnaires regarding the need for unscheduled arterial blood samples and changes in management due to these incidences of arterial blood sampling in the transcutaneous monitoring group. | over the total study period of 72 hours per patient | |
Secondary | Pain and any discomfort from arterial blood sampling and transcutaneous monitoring using a visual analogue scale from 0 to 10 with 0 being no pain and 10 being the worst pain they have ever experienced | Pain and any discomfort (such as skin burns, blisters, erythema, bruising or restriction of physical activity) from arterial blood sampling and transcutaneous monitoring | over the study period of 72 hours per participant | |
Secondary | Proportion of patients admitted with acute hypercapnic respiratory failure that are suitable and agree to participate in the study over one year (to help guide future studies). | Suitability and feasibility | Over the total study period of 1 year. | |
Secondary | Proportion of patients who achieve 50% drop in carbon dioxide in 12 hours and those who achieve carbon dioxide level of 7 kPa or less in 72 hours in each group. | Proportion of patients who achieve 50% drop in carbon dioxide in 12 hours and those who achieve carbon dioxide level of 7 kPa or less in 72 hours in each group. | over the study period of 72 hours per participant | |
Secondary | Proportion of patients who need further changes to ventilator settings beyond 4 hours and 24 hours | How quickly can we optimise NIV settings | over the study period of 72 hours per participant | |
Secondary | Proportion of patients with deterioration in CO2 at 4 and 24 hours after NIV initiation | Can TcCO2 identify deteriorating patients quicker | over the study period of 72 hours per participant | |
Secondary | Proportion of patients who get better and are discharged and proportion that fail to respond and either need mechanical ventilation / progress to palliative care. | Proportion of patients who get better and are discharged and proportion that fail to respond and either need mechanical ventilation / progress to palliative care. | over the study period of 72 hours per participant | |
Secondary | Transcutaneous arm only - agreement between arterial and transcutaneous readings: | a) absolute CO2 values obtained within 30 minutes of each other will be tested using Bland Altman plot; b) trend between serial ABG CO2 values and transcutaneous CO2 readings when ABGs performed (scheduled and unscheduled ABG will be assessed separately). | over the study period of 72 hours per participant | |
Secondary | Discrete choice: what method would patients prefer for monitoring during similar future illness requiring NIV? | Do patients prefer one method of monitoring over the other. This is reasonable to ask all those randomized to TcCO2 as they will experience both ABG and TcCO2 | over the study period of 72 hours per participant | |
Secondary | Clinician Preference questionnaire: whether they prefer ABG versus transcutaneous CO2 monitoring | Taking into consideration time and difficulty, plus certainty of implementing changes to NIV settings and weaning, with respect to modality of carbon dioxide monitoring. | over the total study period of 1 year | |
Secondary | Time needed to wean off NIV in each group i.e. time from documented clinician decision to wean, until time of cessation of NIV. | This would help assess whether transcutaneous CO2 monitoring allows for quicker weaning from NIV. | over the study period of 72 hours per participant | |
Secondary | Basic Health economics data will be gathered to assess whether transcutaneous monitoring is a cost effective way compared to arterial blood gas sampling. | Cost effectiveness of the two methods to monitor CO2 | over the total study period of 1 year |
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