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Comparing iView Video Laryngoscope in the Emergency Department

Brooke Army Medical Center logo

Brooke Army Medical Center

Status

Completed

Conditions

Airway Obstruction
Intubation; Difficult or Failed

Treatments

Device: I View Video Laryngoscope https://www.intersurgical.com/content/files/108253/-1977057700

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT04907695
H-21-022

Details and patient eligibility

About

The US Military is rapidly transitioning into preparing for multi-domain operations. Previous data demonstrates that the most common airway replaced in the prehospital combat setting is endotracheal intubation. Previous studies have suggested that video laryngoscopy (VL) is superior to direct laryngoscopy (DL), which is most prominently noted in the office users . However, the current durable equipment video laryngoscopes are very expensive and cost prohibitive for dispersion around the battlefield. The i-view is a novel video laryngoscope that is marketed for VL and is inexpensive and disposable. Both the durable VL and the i-view are already in use in our emergency department (ED). The investigators are also already collecting data using these devices as part of an approved protocol for an airway registry. The investigators are seeking to utilizing a clinical rotating protocol to compare these two devices in the emergency department.

Full description

OBJECTIVE:

The investigators are seeking to implement a clinical rotating protocol in which the investigators will use alternating months for which VL device is to be used comparing the i-view to the reusable devices within our department.

The investigators are seeking to answer the following questions:

  1. Does the i-view have similar first pass success rates compared to the reusable VL devices (e.g. GlideScope, C-Mac)?
  2. Does the i-view have similar attempts required for placement compared to the reusable VL devices?

SUBJECT POPULATION:

The investigators are seeking all patients undergoing intubation for which the clinician chooses to use VL.

NUMBER OF STUDY RECORDS:

The investigators are seeking all encounters for which a VL intubation happens over the course of one years. Our limit will be based on the number of times the procedure occurs.

INCLUSION CRITERIA:

The investigators are seeking any encounter for which the patient undergoes VL intubation as part of routine clinical care.

SAMPLE SIZE ESTIMATION:

A power analysis in SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC) indicated that a total sample of 122 would be needed to find that the i-view is non-inferior to the reusable VL if the expected outcome rate (proportion of patients experiencing first-pass success) for the i-view is 87%, the expected outcome rate for the reusable VL is 92%, the noninferiority margin is 5%, power is 80%, and alpha is 5%.

DATA ANALYSIS:

The investigators will use the farrington-Manning score test for non-inferiority to test the first two hypotheses (that the i-view has a non-inferior proportion of patients experiencing hypoxic events, and that the i-view has a non-inferior first-pass success rate compared to the reusable VL devices). The farrington-Manning score test computes the proportion (risk) difference and 90% confidence interval (for a one-sided test) with regards to a predetermined non-inferiority limit. The investigators will use pairwise deletion to handle missing data points (i.e., will only exclude observations if missing data relevant to the specific analysis). Moreover, the investigators may perform regression modeling to adjust for confounders. The investigators performed all statistical analysis using Microsoft Excel (version 10, Redmond, Washington) and JMP Statistical Discovery from SAS (version 13, Cary, NC) or another available commercial software package. The investigators will present continuous variables as means and 95% confidence intervals, non-parametric continuous variables and ordinal variables as medians and interquartile ranges, and nominal variables as percentages and numbers. Significance will be set at p=0.05. The investigators will compare binomial variables using the Chi-square test, normally distributed continuous variables using the Student's t-test, and non-parametric and ordinal variables using the Wilcoxon Rank sum test.

Enrollment

168 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • We are seeking any encounter for which the patient undergoes VL intubation as part of routine clinical care.

Exclusion criteria

  • No intubation will be excluded so long as VL is used.

Trial design

168 participants in 1 patient group

Video Laryngoscopy
Description:
Seeking all patients undergoing intubation for which the clinician chooses to use Video Laryngoscopy. The participants will undergo intubation with the investigators chosen device.
Treatment:
Device: I View Video Laryngoscope https://www.intersurgical.com/content/files/108253/-1977057700

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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