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The Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) impacts one of every four patients requiring mechanical ventilation for respiratory support and carries a mortality rate of 40%. To diagnose ARDS, doctors currently use the Berlin definition, that requires chest radiographs and analysis of oxygenation in the blood (arterial blood gas). These tests are not available in areas of the world with constrained resources and may be unnecessarily invasive. A modification of the Berlin definition, using ultrasound and pulse oximetry (a small device that measures oxygen level non-invasively by clipping to the body, typically a finger), has been recently developed and tested in Kigali, Rwanda.
This study will try to confirm the validity of the Kigali modification initially in Boston and Toronto and subsequently in other hospitals worldwide. If confirmed, this new definition could allow for faster recognition and potentially improved treatment of patients with ARDS and facilitate studies worldwide.
The purposes of this study are:
Full description
We hypothesize that the hospital-wide incidence of ARDS, as defined by the Kigali modification, is similar in high resource settings (e.g., Boston and Toronto) as compared to the resource-constrained setting of Kigali, Rwanda. We also hypothesize that pulmonary ultrasound is a more sensitive and similarly specific imaging modality for bilateral opacities than chest radiograph, when compared to the reference standard of chest tomography.
We will test these hypotheses in a multicenter prospective cohort study with the following specific aims:
Aim 1: A) To estimate the hospital-wide incidence of ARDS defined according to both the Berlin definition and the Kigali modification, and B) To describe clinical characteristics and outcomes for these patients.
Aim 2: For the subset of patients who have chest CT, to determine the sensitivity and specificity for bilateral opacities of both chest radiographs and chest ultrasound done within 12 hours as compared to the reference standard CT scans.
As a part of the research study, we will perform a pilot study with the specific aim of assessing feasibility of a multicenter study. Criteria that will be used to assess feasibility include:
All adults (≥ 18 years old) admitted to the hospital during either of two one-week study periods (winter and summer) will be screened daily for hypoxemia (defined as oxygen saturation < 90%) or use of any supplemental oxygen for a total of 7 days. For the initial feasibility phase, both in-person and electronic administrative records screening will be performed. Depending on the site and the results of the pilot phase, in the multicenter study the screening will be accomplished using electronic administrative records or in-person screening.
For any eligible patient who screens positive during the study period we will collect data as detailed in the table below:
Day 1 post-hypoxemia detection
Day 2-6 post-hypoxemia detection
Day 7 post-hypoxemia detection
Outcome data collection
For any eligible patient who does not screen positive during any day of the study period (days 1-7 post hospital admission), we will collect the following data:
For patients undergoing CT chest during the 7 days of data collection, we will attempt the performance of an extra lung ultrasound examination immediately before or after the CT scan
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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