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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05065333
Other study ID # 21-2916
Secondary ID K08HS025696
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date March 16, 2022
Est. completion date March 31, 2023

Study information

Verified date April 2023
Source University of Colorado, Denver
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This study is a prospective, stepped-wedge implementation trial to test the effects of implementing a Clinical Decision Support (CDS) tool for prediction of septic shock in four Emergency Departments within a pediatric healthcare network. The primary outcome will be the proportion of sepsis patients who receive guideline-concordant septic shock care after implementation of the CDS, and the secondary outcome will be time-to-antibiotic after sepsis recognition.


Description:

Septic shock is a leading global cause of pediatric death. In the US, the in-hospital mortality rate for children with sepsis is 5-20%. Septic shock is a state of critical infection that requires advanced and resource-intensive resuscitation, and morbidity-free survival depends on timely diagnosis. Critical care delivered in a delayed fashion, after a child is in hypotensive shock, is less effective; for each hour of unrecognized shock the odds of death more than double. Advances have been made in timely sepsis treatment, but improving diagnosis of septic shock in children remains elusive. Improved early diagnosis would accelerate treatment and improve outcomes. Tools that have been deployed to improve diagnosis in pediatric sepsis either diagnose it after organ dysfunction criteria have been met, or depend heavily on subspecialty physician judgment and have not been tested outside of tertiary pediatric hospitals. Thus, the evidence-based 2020 Surviving Sepsis Children's Guidelines for pediatric sepsis stated that "high-quality trials on pediatric sepsis recognition are lacking, and data are not sufficient to suggest any particular screening tool," and identified pediatric sepsis recognition trials as an important research need. Despite this, the guidelines weakly recommended screening patients "who present as acutely unwell" for septic shock, citing very low quality evidence. The guidelines also stated that there is no evidence for the effectiveness of any existing pediatric sepsis screening tools. This study addresses the gap in knowledge about the effectiveness of pediatric sepsis prediction tools. The study team has developed and retrospectively validated early diagnostic models that leverage clinical data in the Electronic Health Record (EHR) to predict septic shock in children the emergency setting [1, 2]. In order to address concerns about alert fatigue and antibiotic overuse, these predictive models were designed to identify patients at high risk for shock among patients in whom clinicians initially had some suspicion for sepsis. In this pilot implementation trial, Clinical Decision Support based on septic shock prediction models will be introduced to 4 pediatric Emergency Departments (EDs) within the Children's Hospital Colorado care system in a stepped wedge design, in addition to routine clinical care. Routine clinical care at all study sites includes existing sepsis pathways, order sets, and quality metrics that are aligned with the national Improving Pediatric Sepsis Outcomes Collaborative and the Pediatric Surviving Sepsis guidelines. The primary outcome will be the proportion of sepsis patients who receive guideline-concordant septic shock care after implementation of the CDS, and the secondary outcome will be time-to-antibiotic after sepsis recognition.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 1345
Est. completion date March 31, 2023
Est. primary completion date March 31, 2023
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Emergency Department Inclusion Criteria: - Children's Hospital Colorado Emergency Care sites - All providers (physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants) at Children's Hospital Colorado Emergency Care sites will be included Exclusion Criteria: - None Patients whose secondary data will be used to assess the outcomes of the intervention will be 60 days through 18 years old.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Septic Shock Clinical Decision Support
The intervention will be activating a septic shock clinical decision support tool (CDS) in the Electronic Health Record at the site, making it available to trigger and alert Emergency Department providers during clinical care. Patients will be identified when providers suspect sepsis and initiate a sepsis evaluation, using the institutional, clinically-standard, sepsis pathway/orderset. After the CDS is triggered, it will use available Electronic Health Record data to calculate the risk of septic shock, using previously-published predictive models [Ref 1, 2]. The CDS will notify providers if the patient is at elevated risk of septic shock and prompt them to follow institutional standard care for septic shock (including close monitoring, complete laboratory evaluation for organ dysfunction, and immediate clinical involvement of an attending Pediatric Emergency Physician). All clinical care decisions will be determined by the providers.
Clinical Diagnosis Only
Emergency Department sites in this arm will not have Clinical Decision Support for septic shock visible in the Electronic Health Record for providers at the site. Providers will follow usual institutional standards of sepsis care.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Children's Hospital Colorado Aurora Colorado

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Colorado, Denver Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

References & Publications (2)

Scott HF, Colborn KL, Sevick CJ, Bajaj L, Deakyne Davies SJ, Fairclough D, Kissoon N, Kempe A. Development and Validation of a Model to Predict Pediatric Septic Shock Using Data Known 2 Hours After Hospital Arrival. Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2021 Jan 1;22(1):16-26. doi: 10.1097/PCC.0000000000002589. — View Citation

Scott HF, Colborn KL, Sevick CJ, Bajaj L, Kissoon N, Deakyne Davies SJ, Kempe A. Development and Validation of a Predictive Model of the Risk of Pediatric Septic Shock Using Data Known at the Time of Hospital Arrival. J Pediatr. 2020 Feb;217:145-151.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2019.09.079. Epub 2019 Nov 13. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other 30-Day In-Hospital Mortality The number of patients who experience an in-hospital death up to 30 days after Emergency Department arrival. 30 days after Emergency Department arrival
Other Number of Patients Receiving Intravenous Antibiotics during Emergency Department care Number of Patients Receiving Intravenous Antibiotics during Emergency Department care Up to 24 hours after Emergency Department arrival
Other Number of Patients With Septic Shock Septic shock will be defined as suspected infection and systolic hypotension and either vasoactive use or =30 ml/kg intravenous bolus fluid administration Up to 24 hours after Emergency Department arrival
Primary Number of Patients Receiving Guideline-Concordant Septic Shock Care Treatment will be defined as concordant with Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines for shock if intravenous antibiotics are initiated within 60 minutes of sepsis recognition and an intravenous fluid bolus is initiated within 60 minutes of sepsis recognition. This will be a binary outcome. Sepsis recognition is defined as the earlier of: sepsis page sent, sepsis orderset use, or intravenous antibiotic order. Up to 24 hours after Emergency Department arrival
Secondary Time to Antibiotics Time to antibiotics will be measured in minutes from the time of sepsis recognition to the start of intravenous antibiotic treatment. This will be a time-to-event outcome. Sepsis recognition is defined as the earlier of: sepsis page sent, sepsis orderset use, or intravenous antibiotic order. Up to 24 hours after Emergency Department arrival
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