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Strategy to Avoid Excessive Oxygen in Major Burn Patients (SAVE-O2)

University of Colorado Denver (CU Denver) logo

University of Colorado Denver (CU Denver)

Status and phase

Active, not recruiting
Phase 3

Conditions

Disease Attributes
Critical Illness
Pathologic Processes
Wounds and Injury

Treatments

Other: Targeting Normoxemia (SpO2 90-96%; PaO2 60-100 mmHg)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT04534972
19-2799

Details and patient eligibility

About

The objective is to determine the effectiveness of a multimodal educational intervention to reduce supplemental oxygen use in major burn patients. Investigators will also evaluate the safety and clinical effectiveness of the more targeted use of oxygen therapy.

Full description

Oxygen therapy has undisputed importance in the care of critically ill patients to prevent secondary complications related to hypoxemia. Although routine, the practice of excessive over-oxygenation may be harmful. An expert panel was convened and developed the strong consensus to target normoxemia at an oxygen saturation (SpO2) range of 90-96%, an arterial oxygen (PaO2) range of 60-100 mmHg (when applicable), and a fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) of 21% for mechanically ventilated patients or room air for nonmechanically ventilated patients.

Specific Aim: The purpose of this study is to determine the effectiveness of a multimodal educational intervention to reduce supplemental oxygen use in major burn patients. Investigators will also evaluate the safety and clinical effectiveness of the more targeted use of oxygen therapy.

Hypotheses: Clinical efforts to through a multimodal educational intervention will:

  1. Improve the proportion of time spent within target normoxemia thresholds (oxygen saturation [SpO2] 90-96% and/or arterial oxygen [PaO2] 60-100 mmHg [when applicable])
  2. Limiting use of excessive supplemental oxygen
  3. Reduce exposure to hyperoxemia without a substantive increase in hypoxemic episodes or adverse effects

Enrollment

2,000 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 120 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients with acute thermal burn injury who meet the criteria for entry into the state or national burn data repository
  • Admission to burn unit within 24 hours of burn injury

Exclusion criteria

  • Age <18 years
  • Prisoners
  • Known pregnancy

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

2,000 participants in 2 patient groups

Pre-Implementation
No Intervention group
Description:
The control (pre-implementation) group will be burn patients admitted to the burn unit in ICU during the site's control period of the stepped-wedge implementation process (up to 22 months).
Post-Implementation Targeting Normoxemia in Burn ICU
Active Comparator group
Description:
The intervention (post-implementation) group will be patients admitted to the burn unit in ICU during the targeting normoxemia intervention period of the stepped-wedge design implementation process (up to 19 months).
Treatment:
Other: Targeting Normoxemia (SpO2 90-96%; PaO2 60-100 mmHg)

Trial contacts and locations

6

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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