Patients with severe ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes, who require mechanical ventilation, have a particularly bad prognosis. If they require long-term ventilation, their orotracheal tube needs to be, like in any other intensive care patient, replaced by a shorter tracheal tube below the larynx. This so called tracheostomy might be associated with advantages such as less demand of narcotics and pain killers, less lesions in mouth and larynx, better mouth hygiene, safer airway, more patient comfort and earlier mobilisation. The best timepoint for tracheostomy in stroke, however, is not known. Preliminary data from a pilot study of early tracheostomy in patients with hemorrhagic or ischemic stroke suggest that such patients may also have improved survival and long-term functional outcomes, but a large, multicenter clinical trial is needed to confirm these findings.
Background: According to United States data from the National Inpatient Sample, about 1.3% of 1.5 million patients (20,300) hospitalized with ischemic stroke from 2007-2009 underwent tracheostomy - while the number of tracheostomies performed for hemorrhagic stroke is unknown. Historically, mechanically ventilated patients with ischemic or hemorrhagic strokes have had poor functional outcomes, and care of such patients is extremely expensive. Effective interventions to improve survival, improve functional recovery, decrease costs, and increase cost-effectiveness are urgently needed. Early tracheostomy of selected medical and surgical patients allows for dramatically decreased sedation and analgesia, and is associated with improved outcomes. Preliminary data from a pilot study of early tracheostomy in patients with hemorrhagic or ischemic stroke suggest that such patients may also have improved survival and long-term functional outcomes, but a large, multicenter clinical trial is needed to confirm these findings. Method: SETPOINT 2 is a prospective, randomized, controlled, outcome observer-blinded, multicenter, two-armed, comparative trial. Patients are randomized 1:1 to either the experimental group - who undergo percutaneous tracheostomy (PDT) as soon as feasible and within 5 days after intubation ("early tracheostomy") or to the control group ("standard of care" group), in which PDT is performed after day 10 from intubation if the application of an in-house weaning protocol did not lead to successful extubation. Otherwise, no differences in intensive care treatment are intended, and each participating institution's standard operating procedures will be applied to ensure uniform management decisions in fields such as weaning, ventilation, analgesia and sedation, transfusion, and neurological monitoring and management. Blinding to the treatment assignment is impossible for treating physicians, patients and legal representatives as well as for most of the investigators. However, the primary endpoint of long-term outcome and causes of mortality will be assessed by trial-independent adjudicators blinded to the timing of tracheostomy. The study started as an investigator initiated study which was conducted with limited external funding. Some funding (about 50 000 Euros) was provided from third party funds by the principal investigator and other foundations to provide for data management by the IMBI and other organizational aspects of the study. The principal investigator and the US co-principle investigator-David B. Seder, M.D.) together applied for research funding to several foundations and medical associations and in December 2016 received confirmation of funding from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI). Based on this award, some additional endpoints (e.g. neuromonitoring, patient and family experience) were added as secondary endpoints in this study. The core version of this study remained unchanged. There will be no industry funding of the SETPOINT 2 study. This is not an investigation of any specific medical products or medications.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
380
Tracheostomy is performed as percutaneous dilatative tracheostomy with tracheostomy kit by neurointensivists whenever possible. If anatomically or otherwise indicated, surgical tracheostomy is applied.
UHHeidelberg
Heidelberg, Germany
Functional outcome
Dichotomized functional outcome (a modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score of 0-4 (favorable outcome) vs 5,6 (poor outcome)) at 6 months after admission to ICU
Time frame: 6 months
Mortality
This secondary endpoint is assessed as time and type of death during the ICU-stay and 6 months after admission.
Time frame: 6 months
Hospital Length of stay
This secondary endpoint is assessed as days spent at the recruiting hospital from admission to discharge.
Time frame: participants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay, an expected average of 3 weeks
Duration of ventilation
This secondary endpoint is assessed as half-days on the ventilator until the patient is ventilator-independent for 24 h.
Time frame: participants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay, an expected average of 5 weeks
Duration and Quality of Weaning
This secondary endpoint is assessed as half-days spent under the possible application of a weaning protocol, and spent within specific phases of such a protocol.
Time frame: participants will be followed for the duration of weaning, an expected average of 6 weeks
Time of Analgosedation Dependence
This secondary endpoint is assessed as half-days requiring the application of sedatives and analgesics which are also specified.
Time frame: participants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay, an expected average of 3 weeks
Time of ICU dependence
This secondary endpoint is assessed as days from admission to a pre-defined status that would allow discharge from ICU (absence of active infection, vasopressors, pulmonary and cardial instability etc.)
Time frame: participants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay, an expected average of 3 weeks
Vasopressor Dependence
This secondary endpoint is assessed as half-days spent under vasopressors during ICU-stay
Time frame: participants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay, an expected average of 3 weeks
Number and type of complications
This secondary endpoint is assessed as the number and types of complications arelated to tracheostomy (i.e. bleeding, mispositioning, malfunction, replacement demand,etc.).
Time frame: 10 days post tracheostomy
Functional Outcome
This secondary endpoint is assessed as the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) at the above named timepoints.
Time frame: admission and discharge
Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale Score
evaluation of consciousness and sedation score
Time frame: participants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay, an expected average of 3 weeks
Riker Sedation-Agitation-Score
evaluation of consciousness and sedation score
Time frame: participants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay, an expected average of 3 weeks
Burden scale for Family caregivers BSFC-s
assessment of the caregiver burden at the time of discharge from the NCCU and after 6 months
Time frame: at discharge and after 6 month
Patient reported outcome questions
assessment of the patient and caregiver burden after 6 month
Time frame: after 6 month
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