The ICU-Resuscitation Project (ICU-RESUS)
Study Details
Study Description
Brief Summary
Pediatric cardiac arrest affects thousands of hospitalized children each year. High quality cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) saves lives, but is difficult to achieve. The objective of this study is to determine if a novel patient-centric resuscitation care improvement bundle consisting of bedside CPR training and multidisciplinary reviews of each cardiac arrest improves CPR quality and survival outcomes in a multi-center trial.
Condition or Disease | Intervention/Treatment | Phase |
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N/A |
Detailed Description
Pediatric cardiac arrest affects thousands of hospitalized children each year. Progressive heart and lung failure is a predisposing cause in the majority of these events. While cardiac arrest survival outcomes have improved over the last decade, more than half of these children will not live to hospital discharge. As brain injury complicates care in those who do survive, the burden to these children and the public's health is substantial.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) - the medical procedure of providing chest compressions and ventilations during cardiac arrest - is life saving, and higher quality CPR is more effective at doing so. However, providing high quality care during the resuscitation of a child is difficult. Attempts to improve care through conventional training methods have not been successful; therefore, interventions to improve the quality of pediatric CPR and outcomes are needed.
The objective of this study is to determine if a novel resuscitation care improvement bundle that improved outcomes in a single center intensive care unit (ICU) efficacy study is generalizable to other pediatric institutions in a multi-center effectiveness trial. The ICU-Resuscitation (ICU-RESUS) bundle includes: 1) CPR training at the point-of-care (in the ICU rather than a classroom away from patients); and 2) interdisciplinary structured reviews of each cardiac arrest that emphasize patient-centric physiology intended to optimize intra-arrest and post-arrest care. The ICU-RESUS bundle substantially improved CPR quality and nearly doubled the number of children surviving their event during the single center efficacy trial. In this study, a multi-institutional parallel stepped-wedge hybrid cluster-randomized trial, which leverages the existing infrastructure of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)-funded Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network (CPCCRN), is proposed with the following aims: 1) Evaluate the effectiveness of the ICU-RESUS interventional bundle to improve outcomes of children treated for an ICU cardiac arrest; and 2) Evaluate the effectiveness of the ICU-RESUS interventional bundle to improve the quality of CPR provided by ICU healthcare providers in the population of children treated for an ICU cardiac arrest.
Study Design
Arms and Interventions
Arm | Intervention/Treatment |
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No Intervention: Control Standard ICU resuscitation practices |
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Experimental: ICU-RESUS CPR Improvement Bundle ICU-RESUS bundle implementation: 1) point-of-care bedside CPR training; and 2) post-cardiac arrest debriefings. |
Other: ICU-RESUS CPR Improvement Bundle
Point-of-care CPR training
Post-cardiac arrest educational debriefings
Other Names:
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Outcome Measures
Primary Outcome Measures
- Good neurological survival [Baseline and hospital discharge]
Pediatric cerebral performance category of less than or equal to 3 or no change from baseline.
Secondary Outcome Measures
- Excellent CPR [During cardiopulmonary resuscitation]
A composite variable of systolic blood pressure >60 mmHg for neonates, >80 mmHg for infants, or >100 mmHg for older patients AND compression rate between 100-120 / minute, AND a chest compression fraction greater than or equal to 80%.
Eligibility Criteria
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
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Age greater than or equal to 37 weeks and less than or equal to18 years of age;
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AND Received CPR in the ICU setting
Exclusion Criteria:
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Pre-existing terminal illness and patient not expected to survive to hospital discharge.
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Lack of commitment to aggressive ICU therapies.
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Brain death determination prior to CPR event.
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First CPR event associated with this hospital admission was an out-of-hospital CPR event.
Contacts and Locations
Locations
Site | City | State | Country | Postal Code | |
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1 | Children's Hospital of Philadelphia | Philadelphia | Pennsylvania | United States | 19104 |
Sponsors and Collaborators
- Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
- University of Utah
- Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
Investigators
- Principal Investigator: Robert Sutton, MD MSCE, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Study Documents (Full-Text)
None provided.More Information
Publications
- Berg RA, Nadkarni VM, Clark AE, Moler F, Meert K, Harrison RE, Newth CJ, Sutton RM, Wessel DL, Berger JT, Carcillo J, Dalton H, Heidemann S, Shanley TP, Zuppa AF, Doctor A, Tamburro RF, Jenkins TL, Dean JM, Holubkov R, Pollack MM; Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network. Incidence and Outcomes of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation in PICUs. Crit Care Med. 2016 Apr;44(4):798-808. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000001484.
- Sutton RM, French B, Niles DE, Donoghue A, Topjian AA, Nishisaki A, Leffelman J, Wolfe H, Berg RA, Nadkarni VM, Meaney PA. 2010 American Heart Association recommended compression depths during pediatric in-hospital resuscitations are associated with survival. Resuscitation. 2014 Sep;85(9):1179-84. doi: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2014.05.007. Epub 2014 May 16.
- Sutton RM, Friess SH, Naim MY, Lampe JW, Bratinov G, Weiland TR 3rd, Garuccio M, Nadkarni VM, Becker LB, Berg RA. Patient-centric blood pressure-targeted cardiopulmonary resuscitation improves survival from cardiac arrest. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2014 Dec 1;190(11):1255-62. doi: 10.1164/rccm.201407-1343OC.
- Topjian AA, French B, Sutton RM, Conlon T, Nadkarni VM, Moler FW, Dean JM, Berg RA. Early postresuscitation hypotension is associated with increased mortality following pediatric cardiac arrest. Crit Care Med. 2014 Jun;42(6):1518-23. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000000216.
- Wolfe H, Maltese MR, Niles DE, Fischman E, Legkobitova V, Leffelman J, Berg RA, Nadkarni VM, Sutton RM. Blood Pressure Directed Booster Trainings Improve Intensive Care Unit Provider Retention of Excellent Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Skills. Pediatr Emerg Care. 2015 Nov;31(11):743-7. doi: 10.1097/PEC.0000000000000394.
- Wolfe H, Zebuhr C, Topjian AA, Nishisaki A, Niles DE, Meaney PA, Boyle L, Giordano RT, Davis D, Priestley M, Apkon M, Berg RA, Nadkarni VM, Sutton RM. Interdisciplinary ICU cardiac arrest debriefing improves survival outcomes*. Crit Care Med. 2014 Jul;42(7):1688-95. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000000327.
- 15-012576
- R01HL131544
- UG1HD063108