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Variable Ventilation During Acute Respiratory Failure

Variable Ventilation During Acute Respiratory Failure

Status
Terminated
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01083277
Enrollment
7
Registered
2010-03-09
Start date
2012-09-30
Completion date
2016-12-23
Last updated
2017-07-11

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Acute Respiratory Failure

Keywords

oxygenation, ventilation, tidal volume, patterns of breathing, variable ventilation, mechanical ventilation

Brief summary

Acute respiratory failure requiring support with mechanical ventilation occurs with an incidence of 77-100 per 100,000 person-years and accounts for half of all patients admitted to the intensive care unit. Major causes of acute respiratory failure include pneumonia, asthma, emphysema, and acute lung injury. These causes of acute respiratory failure may result in partial lung collapse (atelectasis), and airway narrowing (bronchoconstriction)that result in decreased oxygen levels requiring support with the ventilator. The prolonged inactivity in the supine position associated with mechanical ventilation can further result in atelectasis requiring increased oxygen supplementation through the ventilator. The current standard of care in acute respiratory failure is a strategy of mechanical ventilation using a single lung volume delivered repeatedly. However, the current standard mechanical ventilation strategy is not consistent with the variability in respiration of healthy humans and has been shown to contribute to increased lung injury in some studies. The mortality associated with acute respiratory failure is high, 30-40%. Thus, improvements in mechanical ventilation strategies that improve oxygen levels and potentially decrease further lung injury delivered by the ventilator are warranted. Recent studies by BU Professor Bela Suki and others in humans and animals with acute lung injury, bronchoconstriction, and atelectasis have shown that varying the lung volumes delivered by a ventilator significantly decreases biomarkers of lung injury, improves lung mechanics, and increases oxygenation when compared to identical mean volumes of conventional, monotonous low lung volume ventilation. Therefore, we propose a first-in-human, Phase I study to evaluate the safety of this novel mode of ventilation, Variable Ventilation, during acute respiratory failure

Interventions

In variable ventilation, the tidal volume on the Puritan-Bennett 840 ventilator will be randomly varied by 40% on a breath-by-breath basis around a pre-set mean, using the variable ventilation software developed by Dr. Bela Suki and Dr. Arnab Majumdar. In conventional ventilation, the tidal volume on the Puritan-Bennett 840 ventilator will be set to equal the mean tidal volume used in variable ventilation and does not vary.

tidal volume will be set as the patient's baseline tidal volume prior to study entry and will not vary.

Sponsors

Wallace H. Coulter Foundation
CollaboratorOTHER
Boston Medical Center
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
CROSSOVER
Primary purpose
DEVICE_FEASIBILITY
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. Age \> or equal to 18 2. Requires mechanical ventilation using a volume-controlled mode. 3. Admitted to Boston Medical Center Surgical, Medical, or Coronary Intensive Care Unit 4. Evidence of impaired oxygenation on mechanical ventilator defined by PaO2/FiO2 ratio less than 350 (corresponding to an A-a gradient of approximately 100) or SatO2/FiO2 ratio less than 358 (requiring O2 saturation less than or equal to 97%). 5. Meets Clinical Stability Criteria (on maximum of one vasopressor medication) for at least one hour prior to start of study protocol: 5a. Hemodynamically stable: mean arterial pressure greater than 60 mmHg, heart rate greater than 50 and less than 130 bpm 5b. Respiratory system stable: Respiratory rate less than 35 bpm, O2 saturation greater than 88%, peak pressure on ventilator less than 40 cm H20, FiO2 not greater than 0.80, PEEP level not greater than 12.5 cm H2O, requires suctioning less than once hourly. 5c. Acid-base stability: pH greater than 7.2 and less than 7.55 5d. Neurologic system stable: No agitation as defined by a Riker SAS Score between 2 (very sedated) and 4 (calm and cooperative) 6. Assent of primary ICU care team

Exclusion criteria

1. Do not resuscitate order 2. Increased intracranial pressure 3. Pregnancy (urine pregnancy test for all women of child-bearing age) 4. Planned transport out of ICU during planned study protocol 5. Coagulopathy (INR \> 2.0 or PTT \> 50) 6. Severe thrombocytopenia (platelets \< 20,000) 7. Patients receiving medications meant to increase oxygenation such as inhaled nitric oxide, inhaled prostacyclin, intravenous prostacyclin, and intravenous treprostinil 8. Any patient receiving a medication that is not consistent with FDA-approved labeling 9. A change in the Riker SAS during the study protocol that results in a Riker SAS score of 1: Unarousable (minimal or no response to noxious stimuli, does not communicate or follow commands) or 5: Agitation (anxious or physically agitated, calms to verbal instructions) for a duration of greater than 15 minutes 10. A Riker SAS of 6: Very agitated (requiring restraint and frequent verbal reminding of limits, biting ETT) or higher will result in immediate study discontinuation for the individual participant

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
The occurrence of adverse events in the use of variable ventilation versus conventional ventilation, including the loss of any of the following (1) hemodynamic stability, (2) respiratory stability,(3) acid-base stability, and (4) neurological stability.Up to 24 hours after the end of the study period

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Oxygenation3 hoursPaO2

Other

MeasureTime frameDescription
Biomarkers of lung injury3 hoursIL6, IL8, IL1Ra, SP-D, sTNFaR I and II
Lung mechanics3 hoursquasi static lung compliance, mean airway pressure, peak airway pressure, plateau pressure.
Sedatives3 hoursneed for increased sedative
PaCO23 hours

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026