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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02154542
Other study ID # CHUSJ-3688
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received May 13, 2014
Last updated November 20, 2015
Start date October 2013
Est. completion date September 2014

Study information

Verified date November 2015
Source St. Justine's Hospital
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority Canada: Health Canada
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Mechanical ventilation is a vital therapeutic support, widely used in pediatric intensive care. Invasive ventilation (IV) is associated with risk of major complications ( nosocomial pneumonia, secondary pulmonary barotrauma injuries, pneumothorax) , which can increase : the duration of ventilation, mortality, length of ICU stay and health costs. The practitioner should ask the benefit of the continuation of this IV daily and adapting it, to limit complications. The evaluation of the work of breathing is a key element in understanding the pathophysiology of respiratory distress but is also a key element in improving the management of ventilatory support and the adjustment of ventilatory parameters .

It has been shown that there is an increased work of breathing in all children admitted in ICU for clinical acute respiratory distress that is significantly reduced by ventilatory support. There is probably a relationship that should be proportional between the work of breathing ( PTP ) resulting in respiratory request triggered by the respiratory drive and the electrical activity of the diaphragm ( Edi ) .

The validation of this correlation PTP / Edi has a direct impact on the monitoring of ventilated patients with the ability to monitor the physiological factor while maintaining a classical treatment of children by simply monitoring Edi without additional invasive device .


Description:

It is very important that the respirators detect the child's breathing efforts. This makes it possible to reduce the pressure used by the respirator to push air into the child's lungs, to improve oxygen distribution throughout the child's body and reduce the level of sedation Typical systems do not really detect changes in breathing efforts, but rather volumes of exhaled air. Therefore, the respirator is not always synchronized with patient's respiration and there may be a delay between breathing cycles and the ventilator's, which leads to an increase in his respiratory effort.

Assessing respiratory work is a key element in improving the management of ventilatory support and the adaptation of ventilatory parameters. At this time, routinely used measurements do not include quantitative measurement of the respiratory work, as it requires the installation of probes with pressure heads.

There is new technology known as Neurally Adjusted Ventilatory Assist (NAVA) that employs a probe inserted into the stomach that detects the electrical activity of the diaphragm (primary breathing muscle).The probe is connected to the respirator and triggers respiratory assistance through diaphragm electrical activity, thereby ensuring respiratory assistance that is adapted to the child's needs. This artificial ventilatory mode has already been widely used during invasive ventilation in adults and for short periods of time in infants, children and premature newborn. Health Canada has authorized the use of the NAVA ventilatory mode within the context of this study.

The aim of this study is to assess whether there is a relation between the electrical activity of the diaphragm and respiratory work. This will enable the use of diaphragm activity that can be recorded daily at the child's bedside as an element of respiratory monitoring and allow early detection of dangerously high or low respiratory levels.

The study plans to recruit 20 patients at the CHU Sainte-Justine, which is the only hospital taking part in the study.

The investigators will replace the probe placed in the stomach of any child under artificial ventilation with the study probe. The probe is changed regularly as part of routine care. The study probe is equipped with microelectrodes to measure diaphragm activity as well as a very fine balloon to measure pressure. The patient's diaphragm activity and respiratory work will then be assessed over a 2-hour period under two different ventilatory conditions (the NAVA mode and the conventional mode) in random order. The investigators will perform a random draw to determine the initial ventilator mode.

The two periods, each lasting 60 minutes, will proceed as follows:

The conventional ventilation period: the ventilation parameters are adjusted by the care team based on the practices in effect within the department; the researcher will not intervene.

The NAVA mode period: the initial settings are determined to target support that is similar to that prescribed by the care team and after that are adjusted based on NAVA clinical protocol in effect within the department During the final 30 minutes of each period, a computer will record ventilation parameters, diaphragm activity and respiratory effort. These data will be recorded using a simple connection to the ventilator and no change in the patient's equipment will be required.

If the study naso-gastric tube is still in place at the time of extubation, 3 additional measurements (10 minutes each) will be taken to assess changes in diaphragm activity and respiratory work around extubation:

An initial recording during the hour before extubation; A second one at extubation; and; A third one two hours after extubation.

The investigators will follow patient progress for another 48 hours after extubation.

Data will be collected in the child's medical record for the purposes of the study.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 19
Est. completion date September 2014
Est. primary completion date September 2014
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group N/A to 18 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Up to 18 years

- Child on invasive mechanical ventilation for which the withdrawal phase was determined by the clinician in charge of the patient

- Consent obtained

Exclusion Criteria:

- Post conceptional age < 37 weeks

- Contraindication to changing or insertion of nasogastric tube (esophageal malformation, gastrointestinal bleeding, esophageal varices)

- Curarised patient

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Device:
Neurovent Monitor XIII


Locations

Country Name City State
Canada St. Justine's Hospital Montreal Quebec

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
St. Justine's Hospital

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Canada, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary The correlation between diaphragmatic electrical activity (edi) and the work of breathing assessed by measuring the oesophageal pressure time product (PTP) during mechanical ventilation weaning within 12 hours of extubation No
Secondary Measure of the asynchrony index (AI) during NAVA and standard mode. Comparison of AI and PTP between NAVA and standard mode within 12 hours of extubation No
Secondary Rate profile of Edi and PTP as a predictor of success or failure of the withdrawal within 48 hours after extubation No
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