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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07251790

Optimising Breathing Support at Extubation in Very Preterm Infants: A Clinical Study

PrePAP: Pre-Extubation Continuous Positive Airway Pressure in Very Preterm Infants: A Randomised Controlled Trial

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
134 (estimated)
Sponsor
Murdoch Childrens Research Institute · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
0 Hours – 30 Days
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Many babies born very preterm (\<32 weeks of pregnancy) require support to breathe from a breathing machine (mechanical ventilator) via a breathing tube. Although this keeps babies alive, it can damage their lungs. To reduce this damage, doctors and nurses try to change babies to gentler breathing support that does not require a breathing tube. This is usually done using a method called nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) that uses a nosepiece to deliver breaths. This process of removing the breathing tube is called "extubation". Many babies will need the breathing tube put back in after extubation (for various reasons) and this is independently associated with poorer outcomes. This research study aims to compare two ways of performing extubation - both of which are already used regularly by doctors and nurses. The "standard extubation" approach involves taking a baby's breathing tube out first, then applying the nosepiece and starting nCPAP. The more recent approach, called "prePAP", involves applying the nosepiece and starting nCPAP before taking the breathing tube out. Previous research suggests that a prePAP approach may provide better support for babies during extubation. However, larger studies are required before this approach is more commonly used. This study is investigating whether extubating the baby with prePAP is better than extubating the baby without prePAP. The main question it aims to answer is: Does initiating nCPAP before extubation in very preterm babies reduce the fall in their oxygen levels post-extubation?

Detailed description

The PrePAP trial will investigate if extubation with prePAP (nCPAP commenced prior to extubation) compared to standard extubation practice (nCPAP commenced after extubation) reduces oxygen desaturation in the four hours immediately post-extubation, in very preterm infants being extubated for the first time within the first 30 days of life. Many infants born very preterm (\<32 weeks' gestation) are intubated at birth to receive respiratory support via invasive ventilation. While essential for survival, invasive ventilation can injure their underdeveloped lungs, disrupt lung development and increase the risk of bronchopulmonary dysplasia, a major cause of long-term respiratory morbidity. Transitioning infants to non-invasive ventilation as soon as feasible is prioritised by clinicians. However, in very preterm infants, almost 40% of extubation attempts fail due to oxygen desaturation or lung collapse. Re-intubation due to extubation failure can induce further airway injury, cardiovascular instability, and oxygen desaturation, resulting in clinical deterioration and prolonged hospitalisation. PrePAP has been recently suggested as a method of improving respiratory stability during extubation in preterm infants. PrePAP involves commencing nCPAP prior to extubation, with the intent to maintain lung volumes during extubation; preserving oxygenation from pre- to post-extubation. To date, there isn't any clinical evidence explaining the impact to the lungs when both mechanical ventilation and nCPAP are being applied, nor is there evidence that signals a benefit of using prePAP during extubation. Despite this, prePAP is already used in clinical practice and is described in certain neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) extubation guidelines in Australia. The PrePAP trial is a prospective, multicentre, unblinded, randomised, controlled trial comparing extubation from mechanical ventilation to nCPAP with and without the application of prePAP in very preterm infants born \<30 weeks gestational age at first extubation. Very preterm infants who meet all inclusion (and no exclusion) criteria will be randomised to receive one of two extubation procedures, placing them in either the "Extubation with prePAP" arm or the "Extubation without prePAP" arm: 1. Arm 1: Extubation with prePAP (intervention): nCPAP commenced prior to endotracheal tube removal 2. Arm 2: Extubation without prePAP (control): nCPAP commenced following endotracheal tube removal For both arms, the intervention period will begin with a 2-to-5-minute pre-extubation period (whilst the infant is still ventilated), followed by a post-extubation period of up to 4 hours, and a follow-up period of up to 7 days (168 hours). The primary outcome (lowest S/F ratio) is assessed only during the (up to) 4-hour post-extubation period. The results of this trial will determine the appropriate clinical outcomes and end point for a definitive, larger randomised trial to inform clinical practice.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREPre-extubation continuous positive airway pressurePrior to extubation (2-to-5 minutes) a CPAP hat will be placed on the infant and the circuit set up. A nasal mask will be applied and nCPAP pressure will be commenced at 10 centimetres of water. Only after nCPAP has been in situ for 2 minutes (maximum 5 minutes) will the endotracheal tube be removed.

Timeline

Start date
2026-03-31
Primary completion
2028-03-31
Completion
2028-03-31
First posted
2025-11-26
Last updated
2026-03-20

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Australia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07251790. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.