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Activated CHARcoal in Poisoned Patient - Pilot Trial

CHARPP (Activated CHARcoal in Poisoned Patient): RCT Pilot Study

Status
Recruiting
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05471479
Acronym
CHARPP-Pilot
Enrollment
100
Registered
2022-07-22
Start date
2025-07-16
Completion date
2027-02-01
Last updated
2026-01-29

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

Conditions

Charcoal, Decontamination, Poisoning

Keywords

activated charcoal, decontamination, poisoning, intoxication, toxicity, clinical trial, toxicology, Emergency medicine, PROBE trial

Brief summary

The goal of this clinical pilot trial is to determine the feasibility of the clinical trial. Then the large-scale CHARPP will be conducted in order to determine the efficacity of activated charcoal as a treatment for acute poisoning in a diverse population of both adults and children suspected of ingesting toxic substances that activated charcoal can adsorb. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Can activated charcoal administered within a specific time frame prevent the progression of toxicity? * How does activated charcoal affect the length of stay in the hospital and the intensive care unit? Researchers will compare the intervention arm (receiving activated charcoal) to the control arm (receiving standard supportive care) to see if activated charcoal reduces hospital stay duration, ICU stay and improves overall patient outcomes. Participants will: * Be randomly assigned to either receive activated charcoal or standard supportive care. * Undergo assessments using standardized clinical scales such as the Poison Severity Score and, for children, the PELODS score. * Have their functional outcomes evaluated, such as the ability to return to their original residence without help and manage personal hygiene tasks independently. This structured approach will help clarify the role of activated charcoal in clinical toxicology and inform future treatment protocols.

Detailed description

BACKGROUND: Activated charcoal (AC) is one of the interventions more frequently recommended by poison centers. For instance, in 2020, 32,646 poisoned patients were treated with AC in the United States. This decontamination method has the potential to prevent toxicity and to decrease its severity, but its use is also associated with adverse effects and has a poor palatability. Therefore, we developed a research program named CHARPP (activated CHARcoal in Poisoned Patients) aiming to describe the effect and potential risks associated with the use of AC. This study is particularly focused on whether early administration of activated charcoal can reduce the severity of poisoning outcomes, shorten hospital stays, and mitigate healthcare costs.The first phase of our research program included: a retrospective study and a validation of the Poison Severity Score. The last phase includes a randomized controlled trial (RCT) preceded by a feasibility study in adults and children to compare outcomes in patients who received AC vs those who did not. OBJECTIVES: This concerns the CHARPP RCT feasibility study which aims to evaluate the possibility of conducting a large multicenter RCT comparing outcomes between poisoned patients who received AC and who did not received AC. The targeted primary outcomes includes: 1) recruitment success (100 patients total at the poison centre associated with hospitals and greater than one patient enrolled/hospital/month), 2) protocol adherence (at least 85% of the patient randomized in the intervention group received AC in less than two hours after group allocation if AC was recommended or did not received it if it was not recommended) and, 3) Less than 5% loss to follow-up. As for the large-scale clinical trial if pilot trial shows feasability, the primary outcome will be progression of toxicity as measured using the Poison Severity Score, a patient-oriented metric frequently used in toxicology; mortality, length of stay in both the intensive care unit and hospital, quality of life as measured by the EQ-5D-5L, and changes in the SOFA score for adults and the PELODS score for children. METHODS: This randomized concealed multicenter trial will take place in one poison centre and five academic hospitals within the provincial network of the centre antipoison du Québec. Patients presenting to the Emergency rooms with a proven or suspected ingestion of a substance absorbed by activated charcoal and the ones who can receive the intervention within 6 hours of proven or suspected intoxication will be included. Patients requiring or who will likely require another gastro-intestinal decontamination method, who have a contraindication to receive AC, or who ingested a substance with an entero-hepatic circulation requiring multi-dose AC will be excluded. Once the poison centre has identified an eligible patient, we will use a web-based system to perform a randomization in random blocks of two or four. Co-interventions will be standardized as per the poison centre protocols. Follow up will be done every 8h by the poison centres who will also collect data regarding progression of toxicity and relevant outcomes. The research assistant who will extract data will be blinded to study allocation. Only a descriptive analysis will be done for the pilot trial. Data from paediatric patients will be analysed separately. A data and safety monitoring board independent from the study group will follow the results and approve or not the continuation of the study. RELEVANCE: This will be an excellent opportunity to develop collaborations between poison centers and key actors who will be involved in a larger trial. The results of the research program CHARPP have the potential to influence policies, poison centers recommendations, clinicians' practices and to improve poisoned patients' outcomes.

Interventions

Activated charcoal

OTHERNo activated charcoal

No activated charcoal

Sponsors

Laval University
Lead SponsorOTHER
Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
CollaboratorOTHER_GOV
VITAM - Centre de recherche en santé durable
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
CHU de Quebec-Universite Laval
CollaboratorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE (Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Masking description

Data Analysts: These individuals are responsible for processing and analyzing the collected data. They are blinded to the group allocations to ensure that their analyses are unbiased. Research Assistants: Those involved in collecting trial data from participants, including demographics, medical history, and treatment outcomes, are also blinded to the allocation groups.

Intervention model description

The CHARPP pilot trial employs a Prospective Randomized Open Blinded End-point (PROBE) interventional study model. The study is designed to follow participants forward in time after their enrollment, with interventions and outcomes measured as they occur. Participants are randomly assigned to either the intervention group, which receives activated charcoal, or the control group, which does not receive activated charcoal. This randomization helps to minimize selection bias and balance known and unknown confounding factors across the study groups. The nature of the intervention (activated charcoal) makes it impractical to blind the participants or the clinicians administering the treatment, as the substance visibly changes the color of the oral mucosa to black. While the immediate caregivers and participants know the treatment allocation due to the visible nature of activated charcoal, the outcome assessors and data analysts are blinded to the group assignment.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Adult and pediatric patients who presented to the hospital less than 6h after the ingestion of a potentially toxic dose of a carbo-adsorbable substance (substance adsorbed by activated charcoal ). * Patients who can receive the intervention within 6 hours of proven or suspected intoxication

Exclusion criteria

* Patients requiring or who will likely require another gastro-intestinal decontamination method; * Patients who have contraindication to the use of activated charcoal; * Patients who ingested a substance with an entero-hepatic circulation requiring multi-dose AC; * Patients who have no clinical equipoise for the use of activated charcoal as per the attending physician.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Recruitment success12 months100 patients total at the poison centre associated with hospitals and greater than one patient enrolled/hospital/month
Protocol adherence12 monthsat least 85% of the patient randomized in the intervention group
lost to follow-up12 monthsless than 5%

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Progression of toxicity (descriptive measure of delta Poison Severity Score - PSS max - PSS at randomization calculated at the end of each case)3 monthsmeasured by the delta Poison Severity Score (min = 0 - better outcome; max = 4 - worse outcome) (and the SOFA - sequential organ failure assessment - score for adults or PELOD -paediatric logistic organ dysfunction - score for children) and available drug levels
Mortality3 monthsWill be documented by both the poison centre and the hospitals. Will be collected in by the research coordinator
Length of stay in the intensive care unit and hospital3 monthsWill be documented by both the poison centre and the hospitals. Will be collected in by the research coordinator
Duration of mechanical ventilation3 monthsWill be documented by both the poison centre and the hospitals. Will be collected in by the research coordinator
functional outcomes (descriptive measure: "back to baseline" or "not back to baseline" calculated at the moment of medical discharge, death or decision of withdrawal of life support)6 monthsThe ability of patients to return to their daily lives and activities after treatment. Specifically, the trial looks at whether patients can return to their original residence without help and manage personal hygiene tasks such as toileting independently. Will be documented by both the poison centre and the hospitals. Will be collected in by the research coordinator
adverse events3 monthsWill be documented by both the poison centre and the hospitals. Will be collected in by the research coordinator

Countries

Canada

Contacts

CONTACTMaude St-Onge, MD PhD FRCPC
maude.st-onge.med@ssss.gouv.qc.ca418-932-5357
PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATORMaude St-Onge, MD PhD FRCPC

CHU de Québec - Université Laval

Outcome results

None listed

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