CABARET: Cardiac Arrest Bundle of cARE Trial

Sponsor
University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust (Other)
Overall Status
Not yet recruiting
CT.gov ID
NCT05917717
Collaborator
University of Southampton (Other), South Central Ambulance service (Other), Hampshire and Isle of Wight air Ambulance (Other), Thames Valley Air Ambulance (Other)
30
1
2
8
3.8

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

An out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is a sudden event where the heart stops beating and a person becomes unresponsive. During this event, vital organs in the body receive no blood flow, causing them to shut down. Without intervention to restart the heart, a person effectively dies. In the UK, around 60,000 people experience cardiac arrests each year, with most occurring at home. Despite prompt emergency service response, survival rates are typically low.

There is technology available that has the potential to improve survival rates for out-of-hospital cardiac arrests. The intervention involves three devices used together: head-up position CPR (Elegard), active compression-decompression mechanical CPR (Lucas AD), and the Impedance Threshold device (Resqpod-16). When combined, these devices can enhance blood flow during resuscitation, potentially leading to improved initial resuscitation rates and higher rates of survival with normal brain function after a cardiac arrest.

A pilot study is planned to test the feasibility of using these devices. The results will inform the design of a larger study to determine if this technology can indeed improve survival rates in out-of-hospital cardiac arrests.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Procedure: Neuroprotective 'bundle of care'
N/A

Detailed Description

Out of hospital cardiac arrest (OOHCA) is the sudden cessation of effective cardiovascular circulation in the pre hospital setting. This is sadly a common occurrence within the UK with approximately 60,000 OOHCAs per year. In 30,000 of these, resuscitation is attempted by the ambulance service. Survival remains poor (2-12%) within the UK and even the best performing regions still lag someway behind exemplar global systems (Seattle 21%, Norway 25%). There are a plethora of reasons for variation in outcome, not limited to the availability of community defibrillators, the education and ability of bystanders to provide effective CPR, the response times of the emergency medical personnel, the training of emergency services personnel and their individual exposure to cardiac arrest, the availability of primary percutaneous coronary intervention, and even the availability of extracorporeal resuscitation.

Despite poor outcomes from OOHCA for decades, there exists promising data from animal and cadaver studies that new technological devices could improve the currently poor blood flow generated by chest compressions during CPR, particularly cerebral blood flow. The current standard of care for patients with an OOHCA includes manual CPR delivered at a rate of 100-120 compressions per minute with a depth of 5 cm (maximum 6 cm). In turn, periodic inflation of the lungs using positive pressure ventilation to maintain oxygenation is mandated during CPR. Animal data have shown that blood flow to the heart and brain using this method is approximately 15-30% of normal. Conventional CPR is therefore unphysiological by definition, with intracerebral pressures being too high in the compression phase and intrathoracic pressure being too high in the release phase for adequate blood flow to the brain and heart respectively. Mechanisms and tools to improve this have been available for some time but using them synergistically to achieve improved cerebral and coronary blood flow is a relatively recent advance.

It is now possible to mimic a more physiologically normal situation by combining 3 pieces of technology. These may lead to better organ perfusion during CPR and therefore better rates of survival. The 3 devices in question do this in different complementary ways, in turn;

  1. Head up position- gradated elevation of the head after CPR has been initiated, improves cerebral blood flow during CPR. This has been studied predominantly in porcine models. HUP-CPR enhances venous return, and reduces intracranial pressure during the decompression phase of CPR. This results in improved cerebral perfusion pressure and improves cerebral blood flow.

  2. Active compression/decompression CPR uses a device with a suction cup placed on the thorax that via active decompression generates a negative intrathoracic pressure on each upward stroke, meaning that venous return to the heart improves during each cycle of CPR, allowing more blood to then be pumped to the brain on the next compressive cycle.

  3. Combined with an impedance threshold device which works by limiting air entry into the lungs during chest recoil between chest compressions thereby enhancing the lower intrathoracic pressure achieved by active decompression, as described above.

The first retrospective study examining the combination of active compression decompression CPR with an ITD and HUP-CPR in humans was published in 2022, concluding that rapid initiation of bundle of care-CPR was associated with a higher likelihood of survival to hospital discharge after OHCA when compared with conventional CPR. 9. The first prospective human study using this triple bundle approach is currently ongoing in France.

The 3 devices described above are all CE marked meaning that this trial is not a trial of an experimental device and therefore does not need to be reported to the MHRA for their regulatory approvals.

Justification for undertaking the trial

Survival from OOHCA in the UK remains extremely poor (2-12%). The fact that this has not changed over many decades is of concern. Additionally, the global health disparity that exists in survival from OOCHA between different healthcare systems is stark.

The published animal data has created a plausible biological signal that improvements with cerebral blood flow are indeed possible using a bundle approach to neuroprotective CPR. The practicalities of performing this in human subjects in cardiac arrest is already being done in certain emergency medical systems globally. One study has published retrospective data with a signal to suggest that improved outcomes are possible using this approach. As far as the investigators are aware, no randomised control trial is currently being undertaken to test this hypothesis.

The proposed treatment bundle holds the potential to change this, the investigators are of the opinion that this should be tested scientifically within the remit of a clinical trial and this is the first necessary stage of that process. The individual components have shown promise in animal studies but this has not been borne out in the human trials that have followed. The synergistic and complementary effect of the 3 devices that make up the bundle of care in this study have the potential to change outcomes.

In parts of the USA (Seattle and Phoenix Fire departments) this bundle of care has been brought in due to the marked improvements in survival that have been seen. The investigators are of the opinion that an adequately powered randomised trial is essential to confirm these possible benefits.

Research statement

Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OOHCA) is a common event with poor long-term survival rates, often resulting in poor neurological outcomes. While there are several interventions that may improve survival and neurological outcomes, single interventions alone have not consistently demonstrated significant improvements in outcomes. The combination of head up cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), active compression decompression CPR, and the use of an impedance threshold device has not yet been tested in a pragmatic randomised controlled trial. Therefore, the objective of this study is to assess the feasibility of conducting a randomized trial comparing usual care with a "bundle of care" approach incorporating the above interventions to improve patient outcomes after OOHCA.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Anticipated Enrollment :
30 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Crossover Assignment
Intervention Model Description:
Pilot study - Cluster randomised cross over studyPilot study - Cluster randomised cross over study
Masking:
Double (Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)
Masking Description:
The study team will be blinded to which patients receive which arm of the trial but will be aware of what each service is delivering in each phase of the study. The research team carrying out the flow up will be blinded to the arm of the trial that the participant was in when they are collecting outcome and follow up data. It is impossible to blind the care providers. Participants will be blinded to which arm of the trial they were in (should they regain capacity).
Primary Purpose:
Treatment
Official Title:
Cardiac Arrest Bundle of Care Trial
Anticipated Study Start Date :
Nov 1, 2023
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
May 1, 2024
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
Jul 1, 2024

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
No Intervention: Control (usual care)

Usual care for a cardiac arrest patient with no deviation aside from application of a cerebral saturation monitor (Near-Infrared Spectroscopy NIRS) (when available).

Experimental: Intervention 'bundle of care'

The clinical team will follow a specific sequence of actions using three devices (Elegard, Lucas AD, and ITD-16), in addition to standard CPR. Firstly, they will place the ITD onto the i-gel) or ETT, followed by the Elegard device and the LUCAS AD. The team will also place a cerebral saturation monitor on (Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS)) (if they have access to one). After 2 minutes of CPR via the LUCAS AD with the ResQPOD-16 (ITD), the Elegard device will be turned on and activated to gradually elevate the head approximately 22cm from the ground to the back of the occiput. If necessary, the clinical team may choose to intubate the trachea at this point. Resuscitation will continue for at least 30 minutes or until ROSC is achieved. If ROSC is achieved, standard post ROSC guidelines will be followed.

Procedure: Neuroprotective 'bundle of care'
This includes the 3 devices: Head up cardiopulmonary resuscitation (HUP-CPR) Active compression decompression CPR Impedance threshold device (ITD)

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. The feasibility of initiating the 'bundle of care' (ability to recruit to the intervention, ability to place the 3 devices in the intervention group and use them as per the protocol. [Through study completion an average of up to 1 year]

    The feasibility of initiating the 'bundle of care' (ability to recruit to the intervention) and to adequately perform the randomisation and crossover of each arm within each participating service, evidenced by the number of eligible patients and the number recruited.

  2. Feasibility of delivering a single education package on how to use the 'bundle of care'. [30 days]

    The feasibility of delivering an education package to teach the procedure for the bundle of care intervention and the success of said education package, evidenced by the number of staff trained and the incidence of non-compliance. The package will contain classroom teaching and video resources.

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. First recorded cardiac rhythm of the participants in the trial [30 Minutes]

    To record the initial cardiac arrest rhythm, asystole, pulseless electrical activity, ventricular fibrillation or ventricular tachycardia.

  2. Signs of life during CPR to include a pulse, an attempt to breathe or to move [30 minutes]

    Signs of life during CPR- Presence of agonal respirations and other signs of life (pupillary response, movement during CPR)

  3. Cerebral oxygenation during CPR. [30 minutes]

    (where the monitor is available) using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS)

  4. Maximum end tidal carbon dioxide (CO2) during CPR before ROSC. [30 minutes]

  5. Return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). [60-120 minutes]

    To mark the time of ROSC is it is achieved.

  6. Is the participant alive at hospital at the point of handover in the emergency department (i.e. sustained ROSC) or are they dead. [60-120 minutes]

    Is the patient alive or dead, this is a binary outcome measure

  7. To evaluate any differences between intubation and supraglottic airway use with regard to mortality. [30 days]

  8. To evaluate any differences between intubation and supraglottic airway use with regard to modified Rankin score. [30 days]

    The Modified Rankin score is a score from 0-5 with a higher score indicating a worse neurological outcome after cardiac arrest. The values are as follows. 0 The patient has no residual symptoms. The patient has no significant disability; able to carry out all pre-stroke activities. The patient has slight disability; unable to carry out all pre-stroke activities but able to look after self without daily help. The patient has moderate disability; requiring some external help but able to walk without the assistance of another individual. The patient has moderately severe disability; unable to walk or attend to bodily functions without assistance of another individual. The patient has severe disability; bedridden, incontinent, requires continuous care.

  9. Survival to discharge or 30-day survival (whichever is sooner). [30 days]

  10. Survival with a favourable neurological outcome at hospital discharge (or 30 days) using The modified Rankin Scale (mRS) [30 days]

    The Modified Rankin score is a score from 0-5 with a higher score indicating a worse neurological outcome after cardiac arrest. The values are as follows. 0 The patient has no residual symptoms. The patient has no significant disability; able to carry out all pre-stroke activities. The patient has slight disability; unable to carry out all pre-stroke activities but able to look after self without daily help. The patient has moderate disability; requiring some external help but able to walk without the assistance of another individual. The patient has moderately severe disability; unable to walk or attend to bodily functions without assistance of another individual. The patient has severe disability; bedridden, incontinent, requires continuous care.

  11. To complete a service user questionnaire on the delivery of the intervention. [30 days]

    To evaluate the opinions of the paramedics and doctors recruiting to the trial regarding the use of the equipment in the intervention group and any barriers to recruitment.

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
18 Years to 120 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
No
Inclusion Criteria:
  1. Adult patients (>18 year of age) who have suffered a cardiac arrest

  2. Body habitus is compatible with the bundle devices.

  3. Witnessed event

  4. Time of collapse was known with reasonable certainty to have been to be within 20 minutes.

Exclusion Criteria:
  1. Visibly pregnant women

  2. Prisoners

  3. Traumatic cardiac arrest

  4. Drowning

  5. Hanging

  6. DNACPR

  7. Have been in witnessed cardiac arrest for an estimated time of 21 minutes or more

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation trust Southampton England United Kingdom SO16 6YD

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust
  • University of Southampton
  • South Central Ambulance service
  • Hampshire and Isle of Wight air Ambulance
  • Thames Valley Air Ambulance

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: James Plumb, PhD, University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Additional Information:

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT05917717
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • CABARET
First Posted:
Jun 26, 2023
Last Update Posted:
Jun 28, 2023
Last Verified:
Jun 1, 2023
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
No
Plan to Share IPD:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Keywords provided by University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Jun 28, 2023