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The Risk of Intraventricular Hemorrhage With Flat Midline Versus Right-Tilted Flat Lateral Head Positions

K

King Abdul Aziz General Hospital

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Intraventricular Hemorrhage

Treatments

Other: Right flat lateral head position
Other: Flat midline head position

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01584375
RE11/022
IRBC/084/12 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH) in preterm infants is one of many devastating consequences of prematurity that have both acute and long-term sequelae. Turning a preterm infant's head to one side may increase intracranial pressure and occlude major ipsilateral veins in the neck, which could increase cerebral venous pressure and decrease cerebral venous drainage. Keeping preterm infants' heads in a slightly elevated midline position (side or supine) during the first 168 hours(HOL) has been recommended as one of the 10 potentially better practices to reduce the incidence of IVH in preterm infants. To the best of our knowledge, there has been no systematically collected clinical data quantifying the relationship between IVH and head position in preterm infants. However, the midline head position may challenge the well-known right neonatal head position preference. This preference continues until 3-6 months of age, after which preterm neonates keep their heads mainly in midline. The best head position for preterm neonates is still to be determined. Therefore, the investigators are aiming to conduct a large scale multicenter randomized control trial on order to answer the following research question: Does keeping heads of preterm infants less than 30 weeks of gestation in flat midline (FM) throughout the first 168 HOL reduce the risk of IVH compared to right flat lateral (rFL)? We hypothesized that keeping heads of preterm infants less than 30 weeks of gestation in FM throughout the first 168 HOL would reduce the risk of IVH compared to rFL.

Full description

Investigators will randomly assign infants lying on flat (zero degree) beds to be cared for either in a supine FM or a supine rFL head position throughout the first 168 HOL. Investigators will mount a sign on the incubator indicating the assigned head position to be maintained during the first 168 HOL. The goal is to keep the neonates' heads in their assigned positions throughout the first 168 HOL unless a medical indication required a change in position. The left flat lateral head position will be the back-up position whenever the medical conditions of the study neonates preclude maintaining the assigned head positions. The bedside nurse will check the correctness of the infants' head positions every 4 hours by using the built-in spirit (bubble) level of the open-bed incubators and an L-shaped ruler. Investigators are going to use an elbow connector of HUDSON RCI circuit (adult circuit) in a case SENSORMEDICS will be required for neonates in FM group. Investigators will watch and record pressure ulcers or technical difficulties arising from using high-frequency ventilation (HFV) in the infants in FM position. After their first 168 HOL, the study infants will be given routine nursing care provided in their NICU, including a change in head position every 6-12 hours or as needed on a slightly elevated bed. For obvious reasons, the medical team will be unmasked to the assigned head position. It will be left for the physician discretion for controversial/diversity issue (s) in neonatal care but it will be recorded.

Timing of HUS examinations

  1. All study neonates will have two screening head ultrasounds (HUS) as follows:

    1. Within first 12 HOL.
    2. At about 168 HOL.
  2. Otherwise, investigators will carry HUS according to established IVH diagnosis guidelines:

    1. As early as a clinical suspicion of IVH is raised.
    2. When IVH is detected, then a follow up HUS is repeated within 5-7 days later.

Diagnosis of IVH:

Ultrasound technicians or physicians who have been trained to perform HUS will perform a standard set of HUS views through the anterior fontanel with a high-quality modern real-time portable ultrasound machine with appropriate transducers. They will capture at least six coronal and five sagittal planes. Investigators will send a similar digital format copy of these images and earlier images (if any) to the three study pediatric radiologists who will be blinded to the head position assignments. They independently will report the absence or presence, lateralization (right, left or bilateral), extension, and grade of IVH according to Papile's grading criteria. They will send their reports to the principal investigator via email. If their reports are inconsistent, then diagnosis and grading of IVH will be based on the majority or the consensus among them if majority cannot be reached.

Analysis strategy for withdrawal, drop outs, and protocol violations as both of the following when appropriate:

  1. Intention to treat analysis.
  2. Per protocol analysis: Including only neonates who will have normal first 12 hours of life HUS, complete the study or develop IVH during the study period, and have their heads kept in the assigned head positions throughout study period (first 168 HOL)or until time of IVH diagnosis.

Enrollment

71 patients

Sex

All

Ages

1 to 2 hours old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Born at the three study NICUs.
  2. Gestational age < 30 weeks.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Lethal congenital anomalies.
  2. Hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy.
  3. Need external cardiac compression or epinephrine administration at birth.
  4. Outborns.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

71 participants in 2 patient groups

Flat midline head position
Other group
Treatment:
Other: Flat midline head position
Right flat lateral head position
Other group
Treatment:
Other: Right flat lateral head position

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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