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The objective of this randomized controlled study was to evaluate whether DEX addition to benzodiazepine therapy is effective and safe for AWS patients in the intensive care unit (ICU). Eligible participants were randomly assigned to intervention (D) and control (C) groups. In the group D DEX infusion was started in doses 0,2-1,4 μg/kg/hr and titrated to achieve target sedation level; symptom-triggered BZD administration (diazepam 10mg bolus) were used wherever DEX infusion was not enough. In group K BZD boluses (diazepam 10mg) were used to achieve target sedation level and to control AWS symptoms (symptom-triggered administration). The primary efficacy outcomes were 24-hour diazepam consumption and cumulative diazepam dose required over the course of ICU stay, secondary outcomes were length of ICU stay, sedation and communication quality, haloperidol consumption.
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Ethical issues This study was approved by the Bogomolets National Medical University ethics committee and a written informed concern was obtained from the patient, the patient's family or a legal representative.
Study design This randomized, single-center, controlled study was conducted in the adult ICU at private hospital "Boris" in Kiyv (Ukraine). The inclusion criteria were: age 18 or older, signed informed concern, within 2 hours of ICU admission, diagnosed alcohol withdrawal syndrome or alcohol withdrawal delirium by DSM IV criteria (). The exclusion criteria were age younger than 18 or older than 75, history of use or withdrawal states of other psychoactive substances, general anesthesia during last 24 hours or known other sedatives use, severe neurologic disorder (traumatic brain injury, acute stroke, severe dementia), pregnancy or lactation, severe comorbidities (severe heart failure, acute myocardial infarction, heart rate <50/min, glomerular filtration rate < 30 ml/min, liver failure Child-Pugh class C), known allergy to the study medication.
After primary patient assessment the target sedation level was set individually and study treatment begun. Eligible participants were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to the intervention (group D) and control groups using random assignment in block of four. In group D DEX infusion was started in doses 0,2-1,4 μg/kg/hr and titrated to achieve target sedation level; symptom-triggered BZD administration (diazepam 10mg bolus) were used wherever DEX infusion was not enough. In group K BZD boluses (diazepam 10mg) were used to achieve target sedation level and to control AWS symptoms (symptom-triggered administration). Antipsychotics (haloperidol 5mg boluses) were used as a rescue medication in both groups for severe agitation or hallucinations.
Study outcomes and statistical analysis The primary efficacy outcomes were 24-hour diazepam consumption after study begins and cumulative diazepam dose required over the course of ICU stay.
The secondary efficacy outcomes include:
Sedation was assessed using Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale (RASS) and AWS symptoms severity - with Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment of Alcohol Scale, Revised (CIWA-Ar). RASS was monitored every 2-6 hours and prior to rescue therapy, CIWA-Ar was assessed on the daily basis during sedation stops.
Randomization sequence was generated using a computer algorithm [www.random.org]. Both randomization and data analysis were conducted by independent blind member of research team.
A statistical analysis was performed using Statistics 6.0 and R software. Categorical data are presented as proportions; continuous data - as medians (InterQuartile Range, IQR 25-75%). Chi-square testing demonstrates that all variables under study are discrete. To assess significances two-tailed Mann-Whitney U test and Fisher exact test were used. A P-value of less than 0.05 defined as significant.
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70 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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