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Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Initiation Time in Acute Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

W

Wonju Severance Christian Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
Time
Hyperbaric Oxygenation

Treatments

Procedure: Hyperbaric oxygen therapy

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO2) is recommended for symptomatic patients within 24 h of carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning. However, previous major studies found significantly better outcomes with HBO2 in patients treated within 6 h. Currently, there is no consensus on a CO poisoning-to-HBO2 interval that would not be beneficial.

Therefore, the investigators aimed to evaluate the difference in therapeutic effect depending on the poisoning-to-HBO2 interval after CO exposure in patients with acute CO poisoning who received HBO2 within 24 h. The investigators compared the neurocognitive outcomes of patients according to HBO2 time intervals based on the outcomes of patients treated within 6 h (control group) with propensity score matching using the CO poisoning registry of our hospital.

Full description

In the United States, 50,000 patients with carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning are admitted to the hospital emergency departments annually, resulting in 1,500 deaths. CO poisoning can have serious neurologic sequelae. Immediate treatment, within 24 h after poisoning, is a reasonable recommendation for patients with CO poisoning. Most physicians do not treat with hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO2) 24 h after CO poisoning.

Weaver et al. conducted a double-blind randomized control trial (RCT) satisfying all Consolidated Standards for the Reporting of Trials guidelines, which showed that HBO2 significantly reduced the rate of cognitive sequelae than normobaric oxygen therapy (NBO2) 6 weeks and 12 months post-treatment in patients with acute symptomatic CO poisoning. Although the aforementioned study used a maximum poisoning-to-HBO2 interval of 24 h in the inclusion criteria, more than 60% of enrolled patients were treated with HBO2 in less than 6 h after CO poisoning and the mean poisoning-to-HBO2 time was 5.8 h. In addition, in a subgroup with poisoning-to-HBO2 interval > 6 h, the mean interval was 8.6 h. Therefore, their study results were actually powered to determine the benefit of HBO2 within 6 h post-CO poisoning; hence, it is unknown whether HBO2 reduces the neurocognitive sequelae occurrence rate if performed beyond 6-12 h from CO poisoning.

Currently, there is no consensus on a CO poisoning-to-HBO2 interval that would not be beneficial. Therefore, the investigators aimed to evaluate the difference in therapeutic effect depending on the poisoning-to-HBO2 interval after CO exposure in patients with acute CO poisoning who received HBO2 within 24 h. The investigators compared the neurocognitive outcomes of patients according to HBO2 time intervals based on the outcomes of patients treated within 6 h (control group) with propensity score matching to make tight adjustments to significant differences in patient baseline characteristics using the CO poisoning registry of our hospital.

The investigators classified the patients included in the study into two groups: an early group (≤ 6 h, control group) and a late group (6-24 h, case group), based on the time from patient rescue from CO source to the start of the first HBO2 session. In addition, patients who received HBO2 at 6-24 h were divided into case 1 group (> 6 h and ≤ 12 h) and case 2 group (≥ 12 h and ≤ 24 h), and outcomes were compared with those of patients who received HBO2 within 6 h from CO exposure. Moreover, the investigators classified poisoning severity based on the necessity for intubation; mildly and severely poisoned patients were defined as those not requiring and requiring intubation, respectively

Enrollment

706 patients

Sex

All

Ages

16+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • CO poisoned patients

Exclusion criteria

  1. Not treated with HBO2
  2. < 16 years old
  3. Non-acute CO poisoning
  4. Received HBO2 more than 24 h after poisoning
  5. A history of previous stroke or neurocognitive diseases
  6. Did not undergo follow-up until 6 months
  7. Received specific treatment other than HBO2, such as therapeutic hypothermia
  8. A history of previous CO exposure
  9. A serious illness that can affect the patient's prognosis such as advanced cancer
  10. A cardiac arrest before ED arrival
  11. No recorded data on important variables, such as time from CO exposure to the start of first HBO2

Trial design

706 participants in 1 patient group

Acute CO poisoning
Description:
A diagnosis of CO poisoning was made according to medical history and carboxyhemoglobin \>5% (\>10% in smokers).
Treatment:
Procedure: Hyperbaric oxygen therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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