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Ideal Steroids for Asthma Treatment in the PICU (iSTAT PICU)

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Johns Hopkins Medicine

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Asthma Childhood

Treatments

Drug: Dexamethasone

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03900624
IRB00187813

Details and patient eligibility

About

Determine if differences in (1) pediatric intensive care unit length of stay, (2) continuous nebulized albuterol duration, and (3) a composite outcome of advanced asthma therapy incidence including use of non-invasive ventilation (NIV), terbutaline, inhaled helium and mechanical ventilation between cohorts of children admitted with status asthmaticus to the PICU treated with either IV dexamethasone (DM) or methylprednisolone (MP).

Full description

As the pathophysiology of an acute asthma exacerbation is dysregulated inflammatory pathways, standard treatment includes the prompt initiation of intravenous systemic corticosteroids. Corticosteroids reduce the production of many mediators involved in the inflammatory process and inhibit macrophages, monocytes, T-lymphocytes, eosinophils, and basophils, which are activated during this process. Furthermore, corticosteroids improve the efficacy of beta-2 agonists, such as albuterol, a nebulized medication used for bronchodilation in acute asthma exacerbations. There remains an ongoing dialogue among the expert medical community regarding the superiority of specific IV corticosteroid, dosing, route and delivery. This debate continues secondary to a lack of definitive comparative data in the literature. While the benefits of receiving systemic corticosteroids has been demonstrated in multiple studies, to date, no head-to-head trials have been conducted comparing IV systemic corticosteroids in the PICU setting (DM vs. MP).

While several systemic corticosteroids are FDA approved for the treatment of asthma exacerbation including prednisone, prednisolone, MP and DM, the standard practice in PICU-level care is IV MP every 6 hours until enteral medications can be safely tolerated. Recent data from emergency room literature would suggest there is equipoise in use of dexamethasone as an alternative for methylprednisolone due to its increased glucocorticoid (anti-inflammatory) potency. Steroid agents are chosen at the discretion of clinical providers based upon a child's capacity to tolerate enteral medications and the specific clinical setting (outpatient vs. general inpatient vs. critical inpatient).

The investigators have performed a retrospective study over a 2-year period to assess if differences in clinical outcomes or adverse events exist in cohorts defined by DM exposure in the ER. Their data revealed no differences, but most children were switched to MP during their PICU stay making data analyses severely confounded by exposure to the defining characteristics of the comparative cohort. The investigators seek to first prospectively consent individuals to receive DM during their PICU asthma treatment and compare outcomes to PICU asthmatics concurrently admitted to the PICU receiving local standard care (MP). Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital (JHACH) admits approximately 150 asthmatics per year in the PICU and the investigators hope to enroll up to 50 subjects into a DM only arm. The comparative standard care arm will be assessed at the end of the study period. Primary outcomes include (1) PICU Length of Stay, (2) Continuous nebulized albuterol duration, and (3) a composite outcome including use of non-invasive ventilation (NIV), terbutaline, inhaled helium, inhaled anesthetic gas, mechanical ventilation, and extracorporeal life support. This research will provide the needed epidemiologic and basic comparative data required to power and conduct a definitive, head-to-head trial of DM vs. MP.

Enrollment

92 patients

Sex

All

Ages

5 to 17 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Inclusion criteria are children 5 to 17 years of age with primary admission diagnoses of acute asthma exacerbation or status asthmaticus admitted to the PICU

Exclusion criteria

  • children with existing tracheostomy, cystic fibrosis, and pulmonary hypertension

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

92 participants in 2 patient groups

Methylprednisolone Arm
No Intervention group
Description:
Non-randomized, prospective, observational arm of children receiving standard care for status asthmaticus in the PICU with intravenous methylprednisolone.
Dexamethasone Arm
Experimental group
Description:
Non-randomized, open-label, prospective use of intravenous dexamethasone for children admitted to the PICU with status asthmaticus.
Treatment:
Drug: Dexamethasone

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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