Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04851782

Effects of ivAED™ Device on "Air-in-line" Alarms and Workflow Disruption

Optimizing Value in Critical Care: Effect of Braun Infusomat®Space I IV Infusion Pump and ivEAD™ Air Elimination Device on "Air-in-line" Alarms and Workflow Disruption

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
55 (actual)
Sponsor
Herrick Medical LLC · Industry
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The investigators propose to test the hypothesis, that is, the effectiveness of the ivAED to eliminate air-in-line, comparing two commercially available, standard IV infusion pumps: the Braun Infusomat® Space P and the Becton-Dickenson Alaris™ model 8100 pump (the latter is currently in use as the standard IV infusion pump at Keck Hospital of USC). Testing of an IV infusion pump other the Keck Hospital of USC standard is indicated, as the independent laboratory testing of the Alaris™ 8100 pump found that this model pump is prone to developing air bubbles as the infusion passes through the pump mechanism. These air bubbles can be sufficient to trigger the air-in-line alarm. The Braun Infusomat® Space P IV infusion pump is a market leader like the Alaris™ 8100 pump, was evaluated in independent testing with and without the ivAED™ device, and was NOT found to create bubbles.

Detailed description

There are very few controlled human studies in the literature that assess various existing preventative measures for air embolism. After extensive, independent pre-clinical laboratory testing of the ivAED™ device demonstrating efficacy in removing air-in-line from IV infusions (see Appendix 1), this is the first-in-humans, clinical application of the ivAED™ device. Testing of the ivAED™ device in patients is justified as that is the only means to determine the impact of the device on clinical IV infusion and nursing workflow disruptions (the primary outcomes of the study). Testing of the device in animals, or in healthy volunteers, or in computer simulations cannot provide this real-world information. In addition, the FDA typically requires that laboratory pre-clinical testing be coupled with clinical testing when applying for approval of new, investigational devices. The investigators propose to test the hypothesis, that is, the effectiveness of the ivAED to eliminate air-in-line, comparing two commercially available, standard IV infusion pumps: the Braun Infusomat® Space P and the Becton-Dickenson Alaris™ model 8100 pump (the latter is currently in use as the standard IV infusion pump at Keck Hospital of USC). Testing of an IV infusion pump other the Keck Hospital of USC standard is indicated, as the independent laboratory testing of the Alaris™ 8100 pump found that this model pump is prone to developing air bubbles as the infusion passes through the pump mechanism. These air bubbles can be sufficient to trigger the air-in-line alarm. The Braun Infusomat® Space P IV infusion pump is a market leader like the Alaris™ 8100 pump, was evaluated in independent testing with and without the ivAED™ device, and was NOT found to create bubbles.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEivEAD tubing kitivEAD tubing designed to reduce infusion pump alarms do to air in infusion line

Timeline

Start date
2021-03-29
Primary completion
2024-04-01
Completion
2024-06-01
First posted
2021-04-20
Last updated
2024-07-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04851782. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.