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For adult patients with acute respiratory failure requiring invasive mechanical ventilation, does a ventilation strategy using proportional assist ventilation with load-adjustable gain factors (PAV+) result in a shorter duration of time spent on mechanical ventilation than a ventilation strategy using pressure support ventilation (PSV)?
Full description
Patients with acute respiratory failure require mechanical ventilation to help them breathe until they recover from their acute illness. Although mechanical ventilation is necessary to sustain life in such situations, it can induce weakness of the respiratory muscles which may lead to prolonged dependence on the ventilator. Prolonged dependence on mechanical ventilation is associated with increased mortality, morbidity and costs to the healthcare system. Thus, a main goal of assisted mechanical ventilation is to reduce the patient's respiratory distress while maintaining some respiratory muscle activity. To attain this goal, the amount of ventilator assistance should theoretically be adjusted to target normal or reasonable levels of respiratory effort.
Modes of Mechanical Ventilation:
Proportional assist ventilation with load-adjustable gain factors (PAV+) is a mode of mechanical ventilation which delivers assistance to breathe in proportion to the patient's effort. The proportional assistance, called the gain, can be adjusted by the clinician to maintain the patient's respiratory effort or workload within a reasonable range. This is the only mode of ventilation which allows for measurement and targeting of a specific range of respiratory muscle activity by the patient.
Pressure support ventilation (PSV) is a mode of ventilation which is considered the current standard of care for assisting breathing of patients during the recovery phase of acute respiratory failure. Several studies have shown short term advantages of PAV over PSV, including improved patient-ventilator synchronization, improved adaptability to changes in patient effort, and improved sleep quality.
Goal of this Randomized Controlled Trial:
To demonstrate that for patients with acute respiratory failure, ventilation with PAV+, being more physiological, will result in a shorter duration of time spent on mechanical ventilation than ventilation with PSV.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
A staged enrolment process will be used to identify patients eligible to be enrolled and randomized in the study. At each stage of the enrolment process, a patient must meet inclusion criteria and not meet exclusion criteria in order to pass. To progress to the next stage, patients must continue to pass criteria from the prior stages. After enrolment, there are also specific tests to perform (with pass/fail criteria) to determine eligibility to be randomized.
A. SCREENING INCLUSION CRITERIA:
A. SCREENING EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
B. ENROLMENT INCLUSION CRITERIA:
B. ENROLMENT EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
B. ENROLMENT DEFERRAL CRITERIA:
C. PRESSURE SUPPORT TRIAL INCLUSION CRITEIRA:
C. PRESSURE SUPPORT TRIAL DEFERRAL CRITERIA:
C. PRESSURE SUPPORT TRIAL EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
• C12. Treating physician has declined consent
D. WEANING CRITERIA:
In the final stage (E), patients will be considered eligible for randomization if the following criteria are met.
E. RANDOMIZATION INCLUSION CRITERIA:
E. RANDOMIZATION EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
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575 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Sorcha Mulligan; Karen J Bosma
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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