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The purpose of this study is to determine whether administration of octreotide (12-25 mcg/hour) for 72 hours in combination with the standard of care treatment is effective in reducing bronchorrhea (excessive airway secretions) in mechanically ventilated patients. The use of this drug (octreotide) to manage bronchorrhea has not been approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and is used as an experimental drug in this research study. We are anticipating to enroll approximately 30 subjects in this study at Danbury Hospital, with 15 patients randomly assigned to the "Routine Care" group, which will serve as the control group, and 15 patients randomly assigned to the octreotide group. Control group will only receive the standard of care and will not receive this drug. Total subject participation in this study will be for 4 days (96 hours) or until their breathing tube is removed (extubation), whichever occurs first.
Full description
Octreotide is widely available and has a relatively low cost (about $17/day in our hospital). In the United States, it has been used widely in outpatient and inpatient settings for over 16 years, mostly for various endocrinopathies and gastrointestinal variceal bleeds but also for a number of other pathologies. It is considered by clinicians to be an overall well-tolerated medication, with fewer significant side-effects compared to systemic steroids and scopolamine. If octreotide is proven to be an effective mucoregulator, it may become an essential tool used in the intensive care units throughout the world.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate effectiveness of including parenteral octreotide (12-25 mcg/hour for 72 hours) in addition to the other standard of care treatments deemed necessary by the ICU attending physician in managing bronchorrhea in mechanically ventilated patients. It is hypothesized that octreotide decreases excessive bronchial secretions and shortens time to extubation.
This study is an open-label, randomized controlled trial. Patients will be randomized into two groups of 15, "Routine Care" group, which will serve as the control group, and "Octreotide" group. The amount of bronchial secretions is routinely measured in all mechanically ventilated patients. Once the Primary Team identifies a patient as a candidate for the study (based on the inclusion and exclusion criteria) and an informed consent has been obtained, the baseline volume of bronchial secretions per 12-hour period will be recorded and a security envelope containing group assignment will be opened by the ICU attending. Both groups will continue to receive treatments that have already been initiated to manage bronchial secretions. In addition, "Octreotide" group will receive parenteral octreotide, while "Routine Care" group will receive care as deemed necessary by the Primary Team. The rate of bronchial secretions will be measured and recorded daily; the changes, relative to the baseline measurements, will be compared between the groups. These interventions will be continued for 72 hours or until extubation or withdrawal from the study, whichever occurs earlier. Subsequently, the standard of care management, as determined by the Primary Team, will be resumed.
Primary outcome: Change in the rate of bronchial secretion, as compared to the baseline.
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5 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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