Patients residing in the intensive care unit typically receive mechanical ventilatory support. Selecting the appropriate level of mechanical ventilation is not trivial, and it has been shown that lung protective settings can reduce mortality in patients with lung injury. Despite being a life- saving therapy, duration of mechanical ventilation should be kept at a minimum to reduce effects of immobilization, long-term sedation, patient discomfort, risk of ventilator associated pneumonia, leading to decreasing mortality and economic costs etc. The duration of mechanical ventilation is also an important factor in weaning from ventilatory support, with prolonged ventilator support making the weaning process more difficult. The purpose of this study is to compare mechanical ventilation following advice from the Beacon Caresystem to that of standard care in general medical intensive care unit (ICU) patients, from the start of requiring invasive mechanical ventilation until successful extubation. The Beacon Caresystem will be compared to standard care to investigate whether use of the system results in similar care or reduced time for weaning from mechanical ventilation.
All patients admitted to the ICU with mechanical ventilation are screened for inclusion. Patients receiving invasive mechanical ventilation (≥ 24 h) will be considered for inclusion in the study on a daily basis. Patient screening will be performed by clinical researchers or a delegated clinician and consent/assent will be sought. Then patients will be randomised to the Beacon group or Standard Care group. Randomisation will be performed using sealed envelopes, and in blocks of patients, allowing interim analysis of results in appropriate steps during the study. To avoid that results are affected by patient disease type, randomisation will be stratified for equal distribution between randomisation groups. Patients will be randomly assigned to either standard care of mechanical ventilation, or to follow the advice of the Beacon Caresystem. The results of these two strategies will then be compared based upon the following outcome measurements.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
274
The core of the system is a set of physiological models including pulmonary gas exchange, acid-base chemistry, lung mechanics, and respiratory drive. The Beacon Caresystem tunes these models to the individual patient such that they describe accurately current measurements. Once tuned, the models are used by the system to simulate the effects of changing ventilator settings. The results of these simulations are then used calculate the clinical benefit of changing ventilator settings by balancing the competing goals of mechanical ventilation.
The Magill Department of Anaesthesia, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital
London, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGLength of mechanical ventilation
Length of mechanical ventilation, defined as either the time of intubation in the ICU, or the time of admission to the ICU following previous intubation for surgery, and until successful extubation, with successful
Time frame: Daily assessment of requirement of mechanical ventilation from the time of randomisation until the date of liberation from mechanical ventilation, up to 12 months.
Time to spontaneous ventilation
It is defined as the time taken to wean from mandatory mode of ventilation
Time frame: Daily assessment of spontaneous ventilation from the date of randomisation until the date the patient starts breathing spontaneously, up to 12 months.
Time to extubation
It is defined as the time the decision is made to proceed with removal of the endotracheal tube or tracheal decannulation.
Time frame: Daily assessment of time to extubation from the date of initiation of spontaneous ventilation until the date of liberation from mechanical ventilation, up to 12 months.
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