Clinical Trials Directory

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UnknownNCT00403208

Analgesia-Based Sedation During Mechanical Ventilation

Clinical and Economical Impact of an Analgesia-Based, Goal-Directed, Nurse-Driven Sedation Protocol on Patients on Mechanical Ventilation. A Multicenter Study

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
280 (planned)
Sponsor
Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Hypothesis: A protocolized algorithm for sedation in critically ill patients on mechanical ventilation can decrease ventilator days, costs and improve outcome. This is a multicenter observational-interventional study on critically ill patients who require mechanical ventilation for more than 48 hours, involving 13 ICU in Chile. There are two periods (groups): a descriptive phase of sedation practices, and an interventional period in which an analgesia-based, goal-directed, nurse-driven sedation is applied. Main outcome: ventilator-free days between both periods.

Detailed description

This is a multicenter observational-interventional study on critically ill patients who require mechanical ventilation for more than 48 hours, involving 13 ICU in Chile. Main exclusion criteria are neurologic impairment, previous chronic cardiac, liver and renal failure, second period of mechanical ventilation during hospitalization, short term expected mortality. There is an initial descriptive phase of sedation practice, involving sedative drugs, sedation level assessment, and outcome: ventilator-free days, ICU stay, costs and mortality. After a period of analysis and training, an analgesia-based, goal-directed, nurse-driven sedation protocol is applied. Fentanyl infusion is started and titrated to obtain a patient calm and cooperative or mildly sedated while on mechanical ventilation. Hypnotics and opiates i.v. boluses are allowed during the first hours of mechanical ventilation. Midazolam infusion is started if ventilatory distress continue despite fentanyl 1.8 µg/kg/min. Haldol, muscle relaxants and other sedative drugs are allowed depending on patient condition. After 48 hours of mechanical ventilation, sedative drugs are discontinued in the morning. Main outcome: ventilator-free days. Secondary outcome: ICU stay, costs, and sedation quality. At 6 moths SF-36. Each period is planned to included at least 140 patients, for a 20% difference in ventilator-free days, with 80% power and a 0.05 type I error.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREAnalgesia based sedation in ICU patients

Timeline

Start date
2006-03-01
Completion
2006-11-01
First posted
2006-11-23
Last updated
2006-11-28

Locations

14 sites across 1 country: Chile

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00403208. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.