Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
During weaning the work of breathing is transferred from the ventilator back to the patient. Approximately 40% of the time on ventilators is spent weaning. Studies support the use of screening protocols and tests of patient's ability to breathe spontaneously (SBTs) to identify weaning candidates. Once daily screening is the current standard of care. With respiratory therapists (RTs) in Canadian intensive care units (ICUs), a significant opportunity exists to screen patients more frequently, conduct more SBTs, and reduce the time spent on ventilators and in the ICU.
The study is seeking to identify the optimal screening frequency to minimize patients' exposure to invasive ventilation. The RELEASE Trial will evaluate a simple a simple construct: more frequent screening will result In earlier identification of weaning candidates, more frequent SBT's, and less time spent on ventilators and in the ICU. More frequent screening is an appealing intervention because it is sensible, low risk, and represents a cost effective use of current resources. This simple intervention holds promise as a strategy that could change clinical practice, enhance the care delivered to critically ill adults, and improve clinically important outcomes.
Full description
Eligible patients (< 65 years of age) will be randomly assigned 1:1 to either 'once daily' or 'at least twice daily' screening for weaning readiness.
After randomization, RTs in participating ICUs will be informed of the allocated study arm and bedside nurses will complete a checklist that documents practices related to sedation, analgesia, delirium, and mobilization before each screening period in both study arms. RTs will conduct weaning readiness assessments either 'once daily' or 'at least twice daily' as per group assignment. The checklists, completed by bedside nurses, will merely record current practices in sedation, analgesia and delirium management, and whether patients are being passively or actively mobilized before SBTs.
In the 'once daily screening arm', RTs will screen invasively ventilated patients between approximately 06:00 - 08:00 hours daily. If not yet completed, RTs will prompt RNs to complete the 'practices checklist'. In the 'at least twice daily' screening arm patients will be screened at a minimum between approximately 06:00 - 08:00 hours and 13:00 - 15:00 hours daily. If a screening period is missed inadvertently or due to an investigation or intervention (operation/procedure) necessitating absence from the ICU, it may be conducted later on the same day and ideally within 6 hours of the scheduled screening period. Additional screening trials in the 'at least twice daily' screening arm will be permitted at the discretion of the clinical team (RTs and physicians). Regardless of group assignment, if the SBT screening assessment is passed, an SBT will be conducted.
In the event of study inclusion before 10:00 am, both study arms will be initiated on the day of randomization. For patients randomized after 10:00 am, only one assessment will be required in both study arms on day one. Similarly, if patients can breathe spontaneously on PS or trigger spontaneous breaths on volume or pressure AC, volume or pressure SIMV ± PS, PRVC, PAV, VS, or APRV before 10:00 am, then the allocated screening protocol can resume. However if, patients can not be returned to a mode that permits spontaneous breaths (PS) or supports triggered breaths (volume or pressure AC, volume or pressure SIMV ± PS, PRVC, PAV, VS, or APRV) until after 10:00 am, screening will be conducted only once daily in both treatment arms on the day of the return and will resume as per treatment allocation thereafter.
To pass the 'readiness to wean screen' and undergo an SBT, all of the following criteria must be met:
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
53 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal