This study is designed to evaluate the addition of ketamine to dexmedetomidine as adjunctive therapies of severe alcohol withdrawal in medical ICU patients. Specifically, this study will assess whether the combination of ketamine and dexmedetomidine reduces the doses of conventional agents used for alcohol withdrawal while maintaining patient comfort and safety and will explore if the combination alters the expression of catecholamines in the serum over time.
The combination of ketamine and dexmedetomidine for alcohol withdrawal is pharmacologically rationale and may provide additive benzodiazepine-sparing effects. All subjects will receive benzodiazepine therapy as standard of care. The objectives of this randomized, double-blind pilot study of 20 subjects with severe alcohol withdrawal are to a) determine if adding ketamine 0.5 mg/kg per hour to dexmedetomidine 0.6 µg/kg per hour (both agents administered for up to 72 hours) as adjunctive therapies to a symptom-triggered benzodiazepine protocol reduces the dose requirements of conventional sedatives while maintaining patient comfort and safety; and to b) explore whether epinephrine, a marker of autonomic activity, is expressed differently when ketamine is added to dexmedetomidine as adjunctive therapies.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Blinded study drug administered to experimental arm
Open-label study drug administered to both arms
Blinded comparator administered to control arm
University of Colorado Hospital
Aurora, Colorado, United States
Cumulative Lorazepam Dose Over the First 12 Hours of Alcohol Withdrawal
As part of routine care, the bedside nurse will record the administration of all sedative agents. The hourly, daily and cumulative doses of agents will be determined by the sum of as needed doses, scheduled intermittent doses, and hourly infusion rates. All conventional therapies will be guided by the institution-specific, symptom-triggered alcohol withdrawal protocol to maintain CIWA scores ≤ 7. Intravenous lorazepam is the preferred benzodiazepine for management of alcohol withdrawal in the medical ICU. Phenobarbital and propofol are infrequently used and they are not included in the protocol. All benzodiazepine and barbiturate doses, whether oral or intravenous, will be converted to lorazepam equivalents using the following conversion: 1 mg lorazepam = 2 mg midazolam = 7.5 mg clorazepate = 15 mg phenobarbital.
Time frame: 12 hours
Cumulative Lorazepam Dose Over the First 24 Hours of Alcohol Withdrawal
As part of routine care, the bedside nurse will record the administration of all sedative agents. The hourly, daily and cumulative doses of agents will be determined by the sum of as needed doses, scheduled intermittent doses, and hourly infusion rates. All conventional therapies will be guided by the institution-specific, symptom-triggered alcohol withdrawal protocol to maintain CIWA scores ≤ 7. Intravenous lorazepam is the preferred benzodiazepine for management of alcohol withdrawal in the medical ICU. Phenobarbital and propofol are infrequently used and they are not included in the protocol. All benzodiazepine and barbiturate doses, whether oral or intravenous, will be converted to lorazepam equivalents using the following conversion: 1 mg lorazepam = 2 mg midazolam = 7.5 mg clorazepate = 15 mg phenobarbital.
Time frame: 24 hours
Cumulative Lorazepam Dose Over the 72 Hours of Alcohol Withdrawal
As part of routine care, the bedside nurse will record the administration of all sedative agents. The hourly, daily and cumulative doses of agents will be determined by the sum of as needed doses, scheduled intermittent doses, and hourly infusion rates. All conventional therapies will be guided by the institution-specific, symptom-triggered alcohol withdrawal protocol to maintain CIWA scores ≤ 7. Intravenous lorazepam is the preferred benzodiazepine for management of alcohol withdrawal in the medical ICU. Phenobarbital and propofol are infrequently used and they are not included in the protocol. All benzodiazepine and barbiturate doses, whether oral or intravenous, will be converted to lorazepam equivalents using the following conversion: 1 mg lorazepam = 2 mg midazolam = 7.5 mg clorazepate = 15 mg phenobarbital.
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Time frame: 72 hours
Change in 12-Hour Lorazepam Requirement Pre- and Post-Treatment
As part of routine care, the bedside nurse will record the administration of all sedative agents. The hourly, daily and cumulative doses of agents will be determined by the sum of as needed doses, scheduled intermittent doses, and hourly infusion rates. All conventional therapies will be guided by the institution-specific, symptom-triggered alcohol withdrawal protocol to maintain CIWA scores ≤ 7. Intravenous lorazepam is the preferred benzodiazepine for management of alcohol withdrawal in the medical ICU. Phenobarbital and propofol are infrequently used and they are not included in the protocol. All benzodiazepine and barbiturate doses, whether oral or intravenous, will be converted to lorazepam equivalents using the following conversion: 1 mg lorazepam = 2 mg midazolam = 7.5 mg clorazepate = 15 mg phenobarbital.
Time frame: 12 hours before treatment, 12 hours after treatment on first day of starting study drug
Change in 24-Hour Lorazepam Requirement Pre- and Post-Treatment
As part of routine care, the bedside nurse will record the administration of all sedative agents. The hourly, daily and cumulative doses of agents will be determined by the sum of as needed doses, scheduled intermittent doses, and hourly infusion rates. All conventional therapies will be guided by the institution-specific, symptom-triggered alcohol withdrawal protocol to maintain CIWA scores ≤ 7. Intravenous lorazepam is the preferred benzodiazepine for management of alcohol withdrawal in the medical ICU. Phenobarbital and propofol are infrequently used and they are not included in the protocol. All benzodiazepine and barbiturate doses, whether oral or intravenous, will be converted to lorazepam equivalents using the following conversion: 1 mg lorazepam = 2 mg midazolam = 7.5 mg clorazepate = 15 mg phenobarbital.
Time frame: 24 hours before treatment, 24 hours after treatment on first day of starting study drug
The Degree of Alcohol Withdrawal Assessed by Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment (CIWA) Scores
CIWA scores will be assessed hourly by the bedside nurse. The proportion of CIWA scores ≥ 15 (severe withdrawal symptoms), 8 - 14 (moderate withdrawal symptoms), and ≤ 7 (minimal withdrawal symptoms) will be determined.
Time frame: 72 hours
The Occurrence of Adverse Events: hypotension, hypertension, bradycardia, tachycardia
Blood pressure and heart rate will be assessed hourly by the bedside nurse. Hypotension will be defined as a systolic blood pressure ≤ 90 mmHg or a decrease of systolic blood pressure of 40 mmHg, hypertension will be defined as a systolic blood pressure ≥ 180 mmHg or an increase of systolic blood pressure of 40 mmHg, bradycardia will be defined as a heart rate ≤ 55 beats/minute or a decrease of 20 beats/minutes, and tachycardia will be defined as a heart rate ≥ 120 beats/minute or an increase of 20 beats/minutes. Highest and lowest daily measurements of each will also be collected.
Time frame: 72 hours
Plasma Epinephrine Concentrations Across Groups Over Time
Plasma epinephrine concentrations will be assessed prior to study drug and at times 24, 48, 72 and 96 hours after initiating study drug
Time frame: 96 hours