This study evaluates the management of subjects with Standard of Care (SOC) when admitted to the Emergency Department (ED) with hyperkalemia (potassium value ≥ 5.5 mmol/L). Demographics and medical history data, including previous ED visits and/or hospital admissions for hyperkalemia and reason for current ED admission, will be recorded. Subjects who receive an intervention/treatment for hyperkalemia will have study-related potassium values determined at 30 minutes, 1, 2, and 4 hours after the start of treatment. Subjects who receive no intervention/treatment during the initial 4-hour period will have a study-related potassium value determined 4 hours after the baseline potassium measurement. Available data obtained as part of SOC management will include physical examinations, vital signs, fluid intake and urine output, ECGs, clinical laboratory data, and results of chest x-rays. Data regarding the subject's chief complaint upon admission to the ED, the possible cause of the subject's hyperkalemia, and admitting and discharge diagnosis will be recorded; the subject's overall discharge summary will also be collected.
This study evaluates the management of subjects with Standard of Care (SOC) when admitted to the Emergency Department (ED) with hyperkalemia (potassium value ≥ 5.5 mmol/L). If the initial SOC potassium value is suspect, a second confirmatory SOC sample should be obtained and must be ≥ 5.5 mmol/L to continue study participation. It is acceptable for the site to use a point of care analyzer to obtain SOC potassium if this is the ED's standard practice. Demographics and medical history data, including previous ED visits and/or hospital admissions for hyperkalemia and reason for current ED admission, will be recorded. If a baseline study-related potassium value determined prior to the first intervention/treatment is unable to be obtained, the SOC potassium value that qualified the subject for entry into the study will be used as the subject's baseline. Enrollment of subjects with baseline potassium values \< 6.0 mmol/L will be limited to a maximum of 50 subjects. Subjects who receive an intervention/treatment for hyperkalemia (eg, intravenous \[IV\] calcium, insulin/glucose, beta2-agonists, diuretics, IV bicarbonate, sodium polystyrene sulfonate (SPS), dialysis and/or other intervention for hyperkalemia) will have study-related potassium values drawn at 30 minutes, 1, 2, and 4 hours after the start of treatment. Subjects who receive no intervention/treatment during the initial 4-hour period will have a study-related potassium value drawn 4 hours after the baseline potassium measurement. The timing of each intervention/treatment and the collection of recordable outcomes following admission to the ED will be recorded, together with the procedure followed, as well as dose and route of administration. In addition concomitant medications will be collected from 14 days prior to ED admission and will continue until discharge from the ED. If the subject is admitted into other care (eg, hospital, ICU, observational unit, etc), post-ED concomitant medication collection will be performed for up to 7 days following admission to that unit or until discharge from that unit, if earlier. Recordable outcomes will be limited to pulmonary edema, ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation, pulseless electrical activity arrest, new clinically significant electrocardiogram (ECG) changes (including but not limited to severe bradycardia, advanced heart block, bundle branch block, tachycardia \[\>100 bpm\]), palpitations, hypoglycemia, and gastrointestinal-related events (eg, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea) and any other event deemed significant by the investigator. In addition, recordable outcomes requiring positive-pressure ventilation, central venous access, intubation, chest compressions, IV vasopressors, IV vasodilators, IV anti-arrhythmics, IV fluid bolus, and/or emergency dialysis or resulting in death will be collected. Available data obtained as part of SOC management will include physical examinations, vital signs, fluid intake and urine output, ECGs, clinical laboratory data, and results of chest x-rays. Data regarding the subject's chief complaint upon admission to the ED, the possible cause of the subject's hyperkalemia, and admitting and discharge diagnosis will be recorded; the subject's overall discharge summary will also be collected. As applicable, dates and times will be recorded for the following: ED admission, hospital admission, intensive care unit admission, observation unit admission, step down admission, regular floor admission, discharge (from any and all admissions), dialysis, Do Not Resuscitate order, death, and any other event deemed significant by the investigator. If feasible, billing information and/or Diagnosis-Related Group (DRG) codes and/or Ambulatory Payment Classifications (APC) associated with the ED visit and interventions/treatments will be collected.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
203
Unnamed facility
Montgomery, Alabama, United States
Unnamed facility
Detroit, Michigan, United States
Unnamed facility
Royal Oak, Michigan, United States
Unnamed facility
Kansas City, Missouri, United States
Unnamed facility
St Louis, Missouri, United States
Unnamed facility
Stony Brook, New York, United States
Unnamed facility
Columbus, Ohio, United States
Unnamed facility
Temple, Texas, United States
Absolute change in potassium over 4 hours following the initial intervention/treatment for hyperkalemia.
If no intervention/treatment for hyperkalemia during ED admission, then change over 4 hours following baseline potassium measurement.
Time frame: 4 hours
Choice of intervention/treatment
Changes in study-related potassium following intervention/treatment.
Time frame: 4 hours
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