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NO Need to Ventilate: A Trial of Non-invasive Inhaled Nitric Oxide in Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension of the Newborn

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Emory University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Pulmonary Hypertension

Treatments

Drug: iNO
Procedure: Non-invasive nitric oxide

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00139217
1386-2004

Details and patient eligibility

About

The primary objective of the trial is to determine the feasibility and clinical safety and efficacy of non-invasive inhaled nitric oxide in infants with PPHN without significant pulmonary +-parenchymal disease who would normally receive inhaled nitric oxide only after placement of a tracheal tube and the institution of mechanical ventilation.

Full description

Blending low doses of NO gas with oxygen in the inspiratory limb of mechanical ventilators is an effective method for reducing pulmonary vascular resistance and decreasing extrapulmonary right-to-left shunting at the ductus arteriosus and foramen ovale in many patients with PPHN. However, in some patients with PPHN, sustained elevations of PVR may occur in the absence of or despite improvement in the parenchymal lung disease such that mechanical ventilation is not needed for maintaining adequate gas exchange.

PPN in the absence of pulmonary parenchymal disease or despite improvement in the parenchymal lung disease occurs in a significant subset of newborn infants with hypoxemic respiratory failure. Inhaled NO can be effectively delivered by non-invasive techniques to newborn infants with PPHN, potentially reducing the duration of mechanical ventilation, while safely treating the elevation in pulmonary artery pressure and right-to-left.

A dose of 10-20 ppm measured within the delivery device is sufficient to maintain nasopharyngeal concentrations within a range of 1-10 ppm. My co-authors and I have also reported a series of eleven infants with pulmonary hypertension treated with low dose iNO delivered via nasal cannula after extubation at the 14th Annual CNMC Symposium on ECMO & Advanced Therapies for Respiratory Failure, Keystone, CO, 1998.

Enrollment

400 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Newborn infants >/= 34 weeks with clinical or echocardiographic evidence of PPHN with a PaO2 < 100 of Fio2 0.8 who are not mechanically ventilated

Exclusion criteria

  • Infants with significant lung disease
  • Inability to sustain spontaneous respirations
  • Lethal congenital anomalies
  • Severe birth asphyxia

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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