The purpose of this study is to determine if, in preterm infants \< 37 weeks' gestation at birth receiving oxygen without ventilatory/CPAP support, oxygen environment (OE) compared with nasal cannula oxygen (NC), will decrease the number of episodes with oxygen saturations less than 85% of ≥10 seconds in a 48 hour cross over period on either intervention. This is a randomized cross-over pilot study with a 1:1 parallel allocation of infants to oxygen environment or nasal cannula oxygen using stratified permuted block design. Following a 24 hour period on the first intervention, infants will cross over to a 24 hour period on the second (alternative) intervention before crossing back to the first intervention for a further 24 hours and then back again to the second (alternative) intervention for a further 24 hours.
In preterm infants \< 37 weeks' gestation at birth requiring oxygen without ventilatory/CPAP support, will oxygen environment decrease the number of episodes with oxygen saturations less than 85% for ≥ 10 seconds in a 48 hour cross-over period on either intervention compared with nasal cannula oxygen? The target oxygen saturations (91 to 95%) are based on data from the meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials of oxygen saturation targets which included data on 4911 infants from the SUPPORT, COT, and BOOST II trials. This study will include preterm infants \< 37 weeks' gestation on oxygen therapy via OE or NC with flow rates ≤ 1.0 l/kg/min. There will be three randomization strata \[≥ 22+0/7 to ≤ 25+6/7 weeks, ≥ 26+0/7 to ≤ 28+6/7 weeks, ≥ 29+0/7 to ≤ 36+6/7 weeks' gestation\]. The purpose of stratification is to ensure an appropriate distribution of risk between study arms. This study will not be powered to detect outcome differences within or between strata. Following informed consent, randomization, stratified by gestational age at delivery, will be performed using sequentially numbered sealed opaque envelopes. Each envelope will indicate either Treatment group (OE group) or Control group (NC group). The envelope will only be opened after informed consent has been obtained and just before starting the study on each infant. This will be a single center randomized cross-over pilot study with a 1:1 parallel allocation of infants to oxygen environment or nasal cannula oxygen using stratified permuted block design. Following a 24 hour period on the first intervention and a 15-30 minute washout period, infants will cross-over to a 24 hour period of the second/alternate intervention. Following a further 15-30 minute washout period, infants will cross-over to a 24 hour period on the first intervention. Following another 15-30 minute washout period, infants will cross-over to a 24 hour period on the second/alternate intervention. The effective FiO2 will be calculated for all infants based on their oxygen therapy modality prior to the monitoring period and used to swap between modes. All infants enrolled in the study will have routine monitoring, uniform target saturation ranges of 91-95% with alarm limits set at 88-95%, and standard care for the duration of the study. Pulse oximetry recordings will be downloaded using ixTrend (iexcellence, Wildau, Germany) software to a secure computer system for later data analysis. Infants will continue standard treatment as recommended by the treating physician and will act as their own controls. Primary secondary outcomes are described below. Other safety outcomes include recordings of episodes of bradycardia and circumstances surrounding the event. Pulse oximetry recordings will be downloaded using ixTrend software to a secure computer system for later data analysis.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
25
FiO2 delivered by servo-controlled incubator
FiO2 delivered by nasal cannula
University of Alabama at Birmingham
Birmingham, Alabama, United States
The number of episodes with oxygen saturations less than 85% for ≥10 seconds
Time frame: During a 48 hour cross-over period on either intervention
The proportion of time with oxygen saturations > 95%
Time frame: During a 48 hour cross-over period on either intervention
The coefficient of variation (relative standard deviation) of oxygen saturations
The coefficient of variation is a standardized measure of dispersion of a frequency distribution defined as the ratio of the standard deviation to the mean. It will be used in this study to assess the stability of oxygen saturations.
Time frame: During a 48 hour cross-over period on either intervention
The proportion of time spent outside oxygen saturation target ranges (91-95 %)
Time frame: During a 48 hour cross-over period on either intervention
The proportion of time with oxygen saturations less than 85 %
Time frame: During a 48 hour cross-over period on either intervention
The effective fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) requirement
Effective FiO2 requirement is the actual fraction of inspired oxygen measured at the hypopharynx. In this study we will use tables based on studies where this has been previously calculated to determine the effective FiO2 requirement on the different modes of oxygen therapy during the study period.
Time frame: During a 48 hour cross-over period on either intervention
The number of recorded interventions with tactile stimulation/blow by oxygen/CPAP/IPPV
Each intervention recorded in the electronic medical record will count as 1 intervention regardless of which intervention is recorded. Therefore the same unit of measurement will be used to assess each measure.
Time frame: During a 48 hour cross-over period on either intervention
The number of adjustments in FiO2 recorded in the electronic medical record
Time frame: During a 48 hour cross-over period on either intervention
The number of episodes (≥ 10 seconds) with oxygen saturations less than 80%
Time frame: During a 48 hour cross-over period on either intervention
The number of recorded episodes of bradycardia <80/min
Time frame: During a 48 hour cross-over period on either intervention
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