The goal of this pilot clinical trial is to test if ICU level ventilator protocols are appropriate interventions to study differences in ventilator strategies for patients with acute respiratory failure supported by VV-ECMO. The main questions it aims to answer are: * will clinicians closely follow different ICU ventilator protocols * will different ICU ventilator protocols change the way that patients are treated. Participants will be assigned to one of two ventilator protocols based on the month that they are first started on ECMO. Researchers will compare standard lung-protective ventilation to ultra-lung protective ventilation protocols to see how this changes how the ventilator is set for patients.
This is a pilot, open label, pragmatic cluster-crossover clinical trial testing the feasibility and exploring the clinical impact of ICU-level ventilator management protocols as interventions in patients with acute respiratory failure requiring support with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). The overall objective is to inform the design of a future pragmatic, cluster-randomized clinical trial. The investigators will do this by completion of the following aims: Aim 1: Measure clinician fidelity to ICU-level ventilator management protocols for patients with ARDS treated with ECMO. Hypothesis: Clinicians will have high fidelity to ICU-level ventilator management protocols for patients with severe ARDS on ECMO. To test this hypothesis, the investigators will conduct a pilot cluster-crossover study. The Duke medical ICU will be treated as a single cluster of patients. This cluster will be assigned to a standard lung-protective ventilation protocol for patients treated with ECMO, and then crossover to an ultra-lung protective ventilation protocol. The investigators will record if patient ventilator settings adhere to the assigned protocol at the time of treatment. The proportion of patients whose ventilator settings adhere to the assigned protocol will be compared to an a priori defined threshold to indicate feasibility. Aim 2: Explore the clinical impact of using different ventilator management protocols for patients with ARDS treated with ECMO. Hypothesis: Patients managed with standard lung protective ventilation will have shorter durations of ECMO and mechanical ventilation when compared with patients managed with ultra-lung protective ventilation. To test this hypothesis, the investigators will measure the duration of ECMO and mechanical ventilation for all patients enrolled in the study. The investigators will perform an exploratory analysis examining differences in these outcomes between the two treatment groups.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
18
ICU ventilator protocol adhering to the following lung protective ventilation strategy: * Plateau Pressure ≤ 30 cm of water * PEEP and FiO2 set according to ARDSnet table * Driving Pressure ≤ 15 cm of water * Respiratory rate between 8 and 30 breaths per minute
ICU ventilator protocol adhering to the following lung protective ventilation strategy: * Plateau Pressure ≤ 30 cm of water * PEEP and FiO2 set according to ARDSnet table * Driving Pressure ≤ 15 cm of water * Respiratory rate between 8 and 30 breaths per minute
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, North Carolina, United States
Protocol fidelity rate
Percentage of days that a patient's ventilator settings adhere to assigned protocol
Time frame: From study enrollment until removal of ECMO support or death, whichever comes first, up to 52 weeks
Duration of ECMO
Total number of days a patient is supported with ECMO
Time frame: From study enrollment until removal of ECMO support or death, whichever comes first, up to 52 weeks
Duration of mechanical ventilation
Total number of days a patient is supported with mechanical ventilation
Time frame: From study enrollment until removal of mechanical ventilatory support or death, whichever comes first, up to 52 weeks
Duration of ICU admission
Total number of days a patient is cared for in the ICU
Time frame: From study enrollment until hospital discharge or death, whichever comes first, up to 52 weeks
Duration of Hospital admission
Total number of days patient is admitted to the hospital
Time frame: From study enrollment until hospital discharge or death, whichever comes first, up to 52 weeks
Survival to discharge
Whether a patient survives until hospital discharge
Time frame: From study enrollment until hospital discharge or death, whichever comes first, up to 52 weeks
Time to meeting criteria for ECMO weaning
Total number of days between enrollment and when a patient meets criteria for ECMO weaning
Time frame: From study enrollment until meeting weaning criteria or death, whichever comes first, up to 52 weeks
Time to first ECMO weaning trial
Total number of days between enrollment and when a patient first has an ECMO weaning trial
Time frame: From study enrollment until first weaning trial or death, whichever comes first, up to 52 weeks
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