Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02863081

Helping Older Persons Emerge Stronger

Helping Older Persons Emerge Stronger (HOPES) After Intensive Care Unit Admission

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
6 (actual)
Sponsor
Ohio State University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Select Specialty, a national network of more than 100 LTACHs across the United States, has expressed the desire to adopt the ABCDEF bundle as a "standard of care" for its patients. As part of this initiative, Select first plans to conduct an ABCDEF bundle quality improvement project in one of its local hospitals. The overall purpose of this before-after study is to study prospectively the process and effects of implementing the ABCDEF bundle into the everyday care of patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation in the LTACH setting.

Detailed description

The 300,000 chronically critically ill patients each year who require prolonged mechanical ventilation (PMV)1,2 represent an ever-growing, extremely vulnerable, proportion of intensive care unit (ICU) survivors.3 The increasing number of these patients is an important factor in the expanded use of long-term acute care hospitals (LTACHs), centers that specialize in mechanical ventilation weaning and rehabilitation. The 412 LTACHs currently operated in the United States admit more than 130,000 patients annually and account for more than $5 billion in Medicare expenditures each year.4,5 Unfortunately, LTACH stays for patients requiring PMV are typically complicated and associated with a number of poor outcomes including very high one-year mortality rates (44-77%),6,7 severe and enduring brain dysfunction (i.e., coma and/or delirium), life-altering functional decline, substantial pain and suffering, caregiver burden and diminished quality of life.6-11 While returning home is often an important goal for patients and their families,3 this is a rare outcome in this population.11 Rather, patients requiring PMV often experience multiple transitions in care in the year following their original hospital admission (median of 4), which results in further costs and persistent, profound disability.9 Despite these disheartening findings, to date there is very limited scientific evidence available to help clinicians care for the chronically critically ill, particularly those requiring PMV in LTACHs. Chronically critically ill patients are generally older, sicker and have more comorbidities than their acutely ill counterparts.12 Importantly, they also suffer from much greater symptom burden, with up to 90% of patients experiencing at least one distressing symptom during the course of their illness (e.g., pain, dyspnea, weakness).13 While these symptoms are often thought of as unfortunate and inevitable consequences of critical illness,14 evidence suggests that the inappropriate management of these symptoms may actually be causal to the poor outcomes experienced by this group.15 For example, the results of numerous, well-designed, clinical trials conducted in the traditional ICU setting by our team and others suggest regular pain, agitation, and delirium assessment, prevention and treatment, coupled with strategies that decrease patients' exposure to sedative medications, support early mobilization, promote evidence-based mechanical ventilation discontinuation approaches, and actively engage and empower family members in patient care can positively affect important patient-centered outcomes (e.g., improved survival and physical/cognitive ability).16-26 One unifying method of implementing these evidence based interventions into everyday practice is consistent and reliable use of the ABCDEF bundle (i.e., Assess, prevent, and manage pain, Both Spontaneous Awakening Trials (SATs) \& Spontaneous Breathing Trials (SBTs), Choice of analgesia and sedation, Delirium assess, prevent, and manage, Early mobility and exercise, and Family engagement and empowerment).27 Congruent with the Society of Critical Care Medicine's Clinical Practice Guidelines for the Management of Pain, Agitation, and Delirium and endorsed by a number of patient safety and quality organizations including the Institute for Healthcare Improvement and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the ABCDEF bundle is being actively implemented in ICUs throughout the world. The strength of evidence supporting the ABCDEF bundle, coupled with this strong implementation momentum, has prompted interest in the LTACH in applying the bundle into the everyday care of chronically critically ill patients who require mechanical ventilation. Select Specialty, a national network of more than 100 LTACHs across the United States, has expressed the desire to adopt the ABCDEF bundle as a "standard of care" for its patients. As part of this initiative, Select first plans to conduct an ABCDEF bundle quality improvement project in one of its local hospitals. The overall purpose of this before-after study is to study prospectively the process and effects of implementing the ABCDEF bundle into the everyday care of patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation in the LTACH setting. Specifically the study's aims are to: Aim 1: Identify facilitators and barriers to successful ABCDEF bundle implementation in the LTACH setting. Aim 2: Compare the symptom experience (e.g., pain, agitation, anxiety, fatigue, shortness of breath, restlessness, sadness, hunger, fear, thirst, confusion sedative medication exposure) of patients receiving usual LTACH care (during months 1-4.5) to those treated with the ABCDEF bundle (during months 4.5-9). Aim 3. Evaluate the impact ABCDEF bundle implementation has on safety (i.e., new pneumonias, device self-removal) and patient-centered outcomes (i.e., delirium/coma free days, weaning duration, tracheostomy removal , mortality, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, functional and cognitive ability, discharge disposition, opioid and benzodiazepine withdrawal rates, and quality of life) of patients receiving usual LTACH care (during months 1-4.5) to those treated with the ABCDEF bundle (during months 4.5-9). To complete these aims the investigators will administer an on-line survey and conduct focus group interviews with LTACH staff before and after the ABCDEF bundle is implemented into everyday care. Over the course of a nine month period, the investigators will also consent and enroll 81 patients who require mechanical ventilation at the time of LTACH admission. These patients will undergo daily, in-person symptom assessment using valid and reliable screening tools. Finally, medical record reviews and brief patient interviews will be conducted to obtain data on our outcomes of interest.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERSurveyAdministered to healthcare providers
OTHERinterviewAdministered to patients and LAR (i.e., interviews)

Timeline

Start date
2016-07-01
Primary completion
2017-07-01
Completion
2017-07-01
First posted
2016-08-11
Last updated
2017-09-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02863081. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.