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Mechanically ventilated critically ill adults may require prolonged administration of opioids to facilitate ventilator support and maintain comfort. The prolonged use has been associated with withdrawal symptoms upon rapid weaning in critically ill patients, known as the opioid-associated withdrawal syndrome (OIWS). Such withdrawal symptoms are well described in the paediatric population, however there is a lack of information in the adult population. Currently there is no bedside tool to rapidly identify such patients. Recognition of withdrawal symptoms is the basis for the development of an assessment tool to identify patients with OIWS.
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Hypotheses:
Methods:
A prospective multicentre observational study will be carried out in two university-affiliated hospital ICUs (Montreal General Hospital and Royal Victoria Hospital). All mechanically ventilated adult ICU patients receiving regular (continuous or intermittent) opioids for more than 72 hours will be prospectively screened daily for withdrawal symptoms once the opioid dose is reduced by 10% or more. From that moment, daily evaluation by a physician using the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-5 (DSM-5) criteria for opioid withdrawal will be conducted. Concomitantly, signs and symptoms of withdrawal will be collected by an investigator blinded to the DSM-5 assessment. These assessments will continue daily until the patient is transferred out of ICU or a maximum of 14 days and will be repeated once more between day 1 and day 4 post-transfer out of ICU.
A serum cortisol will be drawn on the first day of dose reduction by 10% or more (baseline) and will be repeated either after 72 hours or upon patient discharge from the ICU, whichever one occurs first.
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Exclusion criteria
Patient for whom consent cannot be obtained
Patient and/or family unable to communicate in French or English
Patient who is deaf without appropriate hearing aid
Imminent and predictable death (< 72 hours) according to medical team
Severe brain injury, defined as Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score of 8 or less at ICU admission
Moderate brain injury, defined as GCS between 9 and 12, with elevated intracranial pressure (ICP > 20 mmHg) which requires ICP monitoring and osmotherapy
Acute neurological condition (e.g. status epilepticus, encephalopathy, stroke). If the acute neurological condition resolves within 72 hours, the patient may be included in the study.
Substance abuse prior to ICU admission.
Readmission to the MGH or RVH ICU during the recruitment period (limit of one study entry per patient)
Spinal cord injury above the lumbar region
29 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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