Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT03100396

Direct REporting of Awareness in MaternitY Patients

Direct Reporting of Awareness in Maternity Patients: a Prospective Evaluation of Accidental Awareness Under General Anaesthesia in Obstetric Surgery Patients

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
3,100 (actual)
Sponsor
St George's, University of London · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

DREAMY is a prospective, multi-centre observational cohort study using a mixed methods approach to provide quantitative and qualitative data on accidental awareness under general anaesthesia (AAGA) in obstetric surgery patients. Obstetric patients undergoing surgery, such as emergency caesarian section under general anaesthesia, are thought to be at higher risk than any other surgical cohorts for AAGA. Patients recruited to the study will be screened for AAGA using a standardised questionnaire on three occasions over 30 days. Follow up with structured interviews for all AAGA patients will occur over 12 months.

Detailed description

Background: The challenges of obstetric general anaesthesia practice - including the use of rapid sequence induction, neuromuscular blockade and short duration between anaesthetic induction and start of surgery - may contribute to a higher risk of awareness under general anaesthesia (AAGA) in these patients. The 2014 Royal College of Anaesthetists/Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland National Audit Project 5 highlighted a higher risk of spontaneously reported AAGA in obstetric patients, but it remains unclear what the full (i.e. non-spontaneously reported) risk is. The aim of DREAMY is to establish the incidence of AAGA following general anaesthesia in obstetric surgery patients. Methods: A standardised Brice questionnaire will be used to screen for recall of intraoperative events in women meeting the eligibility requirements. Questions asked are: 1. What is the last thing you remember before going to sleep? 2. What is the first thing you remember after waking up? 3. Do you remember anything between going to sleep and waking up? 4. Did you dream during your procedure? 5. What was the worst thing about your operation? The validity of the AAGA incidence will be improved by repetition of the questionnaire on three occasions over thirty days and triangulating using structured follow up interviews in all participants reporting AAGA in questionnaire responses. Participants will be followed up over 12 months and asked for self-reported symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) using the PCL-5 checklist. The research is being run as a multi-centre, descriptive study over 12 months. General condition and details of the anaesthetic procedure will also be recorded for a logistic regression analysis.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2017-05-22
Primary completion
2018-08-31
Completion
2019-08-31
First posted
2017-04-04
Last updated
2019-01-17

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03100396. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.