The aim of the study is to examine if automated oxygen delivery with O2matic allows for faster weaning from oxygen and better oxygen control than manually controlled oxygen therapy for patients admitted with an exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Furthermore it will be tested if O2matic compared to manual control allows for faster discharge from hospital. Patients sense of security, anxiety and dyspnea will be evaluated by questionnaires.
Closed-loop control of oxygen therapy is described in the literature used for preterm infants, trauma patients, medical emergency use and patients with COPD. For the latter, closed-loop therapy has been used for patients admitted to hospital with an exacerbation, for domiciliary oxygen use and during exercise. O2matic is a closed-loop system that is based on continuous and non-invasive measurement of pulse and oxygen-saturation (SpO2). The algorithm in O2matic controls oxygen delivery with the aim of keeping the SpO2 within the desired interval, which could be 88-92 % for COPD-patients in accordance with international guidelines on this topic. SpO2-interval can be set for the individual patients, as can the range of acceptable oxygen-flow. If SpO2 or oxygen-flow cannot be maintained within the desired intervals an alarm will sound. All studies on closed-loop systems have shown that this method is better than manually control by nurse to maintain saturation within the desired interval. Furthermore, some studies have indicated that closed-loop has the possibility to reduce admission time and to reduce time spent with oxygen therapy, due to more efficient and fast withdrawal from oxygen supplementation. In the present study O2matic will be tested versus manual control, for patients admitted with an exacerbation in COPD, and in need of supplemental oxygen. During the study the patients will either have oxygen controlled with O2matic or manually by nursing staff for 3 consecutive days. All patients will have continuous logging of pulse, oxygen-saturation and oxygen-flow with O2matic, but only in the O2matic active group, the algorithm will control oxygen-delivery. The primary hypothesis is that O2matic compared to manual control allows for faster weaning from oxygen supplementation, and that more patients will be weaned from oxygen supplementation within a time frame of 3 days. Furthermore it will be tested if O2matic compared to manual control leads to faster achieved respiratory stability, allowing for hospital discharge. It will be tested if O2matic is better than manual control in maintaining oxygen-saturation within the desired interval and reducing time with unintended hypoxia and hyperoxia. Patients sense of security and feeling of anxiety and dyspnea will be evaluated by questionnaires. No safety issues has been reported in the literature. O2matic is approved for clinical testing by The Danish Medicines Agency, The Ethics Committee in the Capital Region of Denmark and by the regional Data Protection Board. The study will be conducted according to Good Clinical Practice (GCP) standards with independent monitoring. All adverse events and serious adverse events will be monitored and serious adverse events will be reported to Danish Medicines Agency.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
157
O2matic controls oxygen with the aim of maintaining SpO2 within a predefined target interval, e.g. 88-92 % with the lowest possible supplementation of oxygen by nasal cannula
Bispebjerg University Hospital
Copenhagen, Denmark
Nordsjællands Hospital
Frederikssund, Denmark
Gentofte University Hospital
Hellerup, Denmark
Herlev University Hospital
Herlev, Denmark
Hvidovre University Hospital
Hvidovre, Denmark
Time to weaning from oxygen supplementation
Time to weaning from oxygen supplementation in O2matic and manual arm (Patients will be followed for this outcome during the admission, up to 30 days)
Time frame: 30 days
Number of patients weaned from oxygen supplementation after day 1
Fraction of patients weaned from oxygen supplementation after 1 day in O2matic and manual arm
Time frame: 1 day
Number of patients weaned from oxygen supplementation after day 3
Fraction of patients weaned from oxygen supplementation after 3 days in O2matic and manual arm
Time frame: 3 days
Time within SpO2 interval
Fraction of time within prescribed SpO2 interval in O2matic and manual arm
Time frame: 3 days
Time with severe hypoxemia
Fraction of time with SpO2 \< 85 % in O2matic and manual arm
Time frame: 3 days
Time with minor hypoxemia
Fraction of time with SpO2 below target but not below 85 % in O2matic and manual arm
Time frame: 3 days
Time with hyperoxia
Fraction of time with SpO2 above target in O2matic and manual arm
Time frame: 3 days
Sensation of safety
Patients sensation of safety measured by Visual Analog Scale (VAS) score in O2matic and manual arm
Time frame: 3 days
Sensation of anxiety
Patients sensation of anxiety measured by Hospital Anxiety and Depression (HADS-A ) subscale in O2matic and manual arm
Time frame: 3 days
Sensation of dyspnea
Patients sensation of dyspnea measured by Multidimensional Dyspnea Profile (MDP) in O2matic and manual arm
Time frame: 3 days
Time to discharge
Time from admission to discharge from hospital
Time frame: 30 days
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