Viral Bronchiolitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Inhaled Hypertonic Saline to Reduce Hospital Admissions in Infants With Viral Bronchiolitis (HS in ER Study)
Inhaled 3% hypertonic saline (HS) administered every 2-8 hours to infants admitted to
hospital with viral bronchiolitis has been shown to improve airway clearance and reduces
length of stay.
Hypothesis: When infants first present to the ER, frequent administration of HS over a brief
time period will provide significant symptom improvement such that the need for hospital
admission will be reduced.
Objective: To determine in a randomized, controlled and double-blind fashion if the short
term intensive use of inhaled 3% hypertonic saline (HS) in the Emergency Room (ER) can
reduce the rate of hospital admission for infants presenting with moderately severe viral
bronchiolitis.
Patients presenting to the Emergency Room (ER) or out-patient department with a diagnosis of
moderately severe bronchiolitis (as defined by inclusion/exclusion criteria below) will be
approached for entry into the study. After the initial routine assessment by the ER medical
and nursing staff, informed consent will be obtained and the infant will be randomized to
receive treatment in a double-blinded fashion with 4 ml of nebulized study solution
containing 1 mg salbutamol (bronchodilator) plus either 3% hypertonic saline (HS, study
group) or 0.9% saline (NS, control group) every 20 minutes for a total of 3 doses. After an
observation period of 1 hour following the last dose, the infant will be reassessed by the
attending physician in the ER for disposition (admit, discharge home, remain in ER for
further treatment) at which point the infant's active involvement in the study will end. All
subsequent therapy, if needed, will be at the sole discretion of the attending physician.
The family of each recruited subject will be contacted by phone 7 days later to assess
resolution of symptoms or the presence of any unexpected adverse effects.
Clinical response to the above treatment will also be determined independently by the study
physician or designate utilizing a standardized respiratory scoring system, the Respiratory
Distress Assessment Instrument (RDAI), at study entry and after the post-treatment
observation period. The primary outcome measure is to compare the rate of admission to
hospital between the study and control groups. A secondary outcome measure will involve the
assessment of change in the RDAI between study entry and post-treatment.
The infant will remain in the ER throughout the study period and receive standard ongoing
monitoring by the nursing staff. In the unlikely event of significant clinical worsening
during this period, the ER physician on duty will be notified to assess and intervene as
he/she feels appropriate. The site study investigator will be immediately notified of all
such occurrences by the research assistant involved.
The study will be conducted over a single bronchiolitis season from November 1, 2008 to
April 1, 2009. There will be 2 study sites as listed below with the name of the study site
director.
- Royal Victoria Hospital of Barrie (Emergency Department), Barrie ON (B.A. Kuzik, MD,
FRCP (lead investigator))
- Kingston General Hospital (Emergency Department) and Hotel Dieu Hospital (Emergency
Department, Children's Outpatient Centre), Kingston ON (M. P. Flavin, MB, MRCP, FRCP)
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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