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Background:
Depressed Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) is common among critically ill patient s in the intensive care unit (ICU). It is one of the main reasons that hampers liberation from mechanical ventilation among ICU patients. Caffeine is commonly used in neonates for the treatment of apnea of prematurity. However, its efficacy has not been established in adult population.
Objective:
To find out the efficacy of oral caffeine in shortening duration of mechanical ventilation among adult patients.
Hypothesis:
Oral caffeine is effective as a central nervous system stimulant among adult patients with depressed GCS.
Study design:
Multi-center, randomised, double blind, placebo controlled clinical trial
Population:
Adult patients (≥ 21 years old) with GCS ≤ 8 from any causes (excluding surgically reversible causes) requiring continuation of mechanical ventilation, whom acute medical issues are stable or has resolved but not suitable for extubation solely due to depressed GCS, not planned for any surgical procedures within 24 hours and not on sedative agents for at least 24 hours, will be included in this study. For patients with primary Central Nervous System (CN lesions, neurologist or neurosurgeon approval will be obtained prior to recruitment. The exclusion criteria include known allergy or adverse reactions from caffeine, pregnant women, breast-feeding women, uncontrolled cardiac arrhythmias, uncontrolled hypertension, hyperactive delirium, patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD, any stage) who received midazolam or morphine infusion, patients who received barbiturate coma, patients who are on theophylline, aminophylline or psychotropic agents at the point of screening for recruitment, patients with feed intolerant, short bowel syndrome and active seizures.
Intervention:
Oral caffeine citrate 5mg/kg/dose twice a day (8am, 2pm) vs placebo
Outcomes:
Primary - Duration of mechanical ventilation Secondary - ICU mortality, 30-days mortality, ICU length of stay, blood pressure, heart rate, incidence of arrhythmia, GCS, incidence of re-intubation and need for tracheostomy
Full description
Depressed Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) is common among critically ill patients in the intensive care unit (ICU). It is one of the main reasons that hampers liberation from mechanical ventilation among ICU patients. Current management of this disorder focuses mainly on supportive care and treatment of the underlying disease. Directed therapies targeting neurochemical and neurotransmitter pathways are not currently available and it represents an important area of research. Caffeine is commonly used in neonates for the treatment of apnea of prematurity. It is a CNS stimulant that stimulates central respiratory drive, increases medullary respiratory center sensitivity to carbon dioxide and improves diaphragmatic contractility. However, its efficacy has not been established in adult population.
Hypothesis:
Objective:
The primary objectives of the study are:
The secondary objectives are:
(To describe the ICU mortality, 30-days mortality, ICU length of stay, GCS, incidence of re-intubation, incidence of terminal extubation and need for tracheostomy among critically ill adult patients administered with oral caffeine
Proposed Trial Design:
The investigators propose a pilot multi-center, single arm trial of 10 patients with depressed GCS, assigned to receive oral caffeine. 10 subjects from SGH and SKH who are on mechanical ventilation with depressed GCS will be recruited into this study. No randomisation or blinding will be carried out in this study.
Planned Trial Interventions:
Participants will receive oral caffeine through their feeding tube, 5mg/kg/dose twice daily. Oral caffeine solution (colorless and odorless) will be prepared by pharmacy laboratory and supplied in amber glass bottle. Potential drug-drug interaction with oral caffeine will be monitored throughout the study period:
Screening Visits and Procedures:
Study subjects will be identified through referral by the attending ICU medical team or weekly patient screening. Potential subjects will be reviewed by one of the study team members for recruitment eligibility, according to the study inclusion and exclusion criteria. Consent will be obtained from patient's Legally Appointed Representative(LAR) if available, or the next of kin within 72 hours.
Duration of follow up:
Patient clinical status will be monitored on daily basis until 30 days after recruitment or discharge from hospital, whichever earlier.
Data collection:
Data collection will be done prospectively. All parameters collected are part of standard of care, no additional test required for the purpose of this study. Study feasibility data will be collected from screening and recruitment logs.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Adult patients (≥ 21 years old),
Patients with encephalopathy (GCS ≤ 8) limiting extubation, where encephalopathy is deemed by clinician to be unresponsive to treatment or not eligible for treatment to reverse the encephalopathy (eg. transplantation) or if no treatment exists, and
Patients who are not planned for any surgical procedures within 24 hours
Patients who are not on sedative agents for at least 24 hours (exception for low dose fentanyl of up to 30mcg/h and dexmedetomidine of up to 0.5mcg/kg/h for analgesia/sedation/tube tolerance)
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
10 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Chuan Poh Lim
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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