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Clinical Trials/NCT05587517
NCT05587517
Recruiting
Phase 2

A Clinical Trial of Interventions to Support Family Surrogates of Critically Ill Patients

Weill Medical College of Cornell University3 sites in 1 country172 target enrollmentOctober 11, 2022

Overview

Phase
Phase 2
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Grief
Sponsor
Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Enrollment
172
Locations
3
Primary Endpoint
Change of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
Status
Recruiting
Last Updated
6 months ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Hypotheses 1a and 1b: Compared to Supportive Conversation arm, the EMPOWER intervention will significantly decrease surrogate decision makers' symptoms of grief and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) (primary outcomes); and H1b. experiential avoidance, depression, regrets, and increases in patients' value-concordant care (secondary outcomes) at T1-T4.

Hypothesis 2. Qualitative data will provide insights not captured by quantitative data.

Hypothesis 3. Reductions in experiential avoidance will mediate reductions in grief and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) symptoms, highlighting it as important to target in future implementation.

Detailed Description

Intensive Care Units (ICUs) are stressful places fraught with grief for family members who witness dying loved ones, often in pain, struggling to breathe and/or maintain consciousness. Compounding their distress, family members are often thrust into the position of patient "surrogate," needing to make life-and-death decisions on the patient's behalf. Researchers have shown that end-of-life (EoL) decision-making is undermined by grief, which interferes with acceptance of the patient's impending death and leads to care choices that adversely affect patients' quality of care and death.1-3 These circumstances heighten surrogates' risk of meeting criteria for Prolonged Grief Disorder (PGD), Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), and decisional regret about the EoL care that the patient received, each associated with poor bereavement outcomes.4-7 Nearly 60% of ICU surrogates report moderate to extreme grief; 34% report extreme levels of peritraumatic stress symptoms.1 The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has made an already bad situation worse. At the start of the pandemic, social distancing policies forced millions of families to confront obstacles to communication, medical decision-making, and care.8-10 Surrogates were left struggling with severe pre-loss grief and peritraumatic stress -- intensely longing to be near to the patient, confused about their roles, lonely, horrified, angry, disoriented and emotionally numb.10,11 Now, as the Delta variant creates a new "wave" of mortality and infection, bereaved family members may have remorse about vaccine refusal,12 feel guilty for transmitting the virus to the patient, or regret decisions about EoL care. With over 35 million cases and 600,000 deaths in the United States from COVID-19,13 the need for psychosocial interventions to support surrogates in the ICU is clear. Prior efforts to address the plight of family surrogates of critically ill patients have proved disappointing14-20 - with one ICU intervention significantly increasing the surrogate's severity of PTSD symptoms.14 A key limitation of these interventions is that while they targeted psychological outcomes, they were not psychological interventions. To address this, the investigators developed a brief, flexibly administered cognitive-behavioral, acceptance-based psychological intervention called EMPOWER (Enhancing \& Mobilizing the POtential for Wellness \& Emotional Resilience).21,22 Our pilot NIH-R21 (N=39) showed that EMPOWER had superior efficacy to enhanced usual care for reducing symptoms of PGD (d=1.20) and PTSD (d=.99). Consistent with mediation, EMPOWER reduced experiential avoidance (d=1.20); these reductions were correlated with PGD and PTSD change scores (p\<0.01). Large reductions in decisional regret (d=1.57) were observed, with no notable differences by surrogate race or delivery format (telehealth vs. in-person). Investigators propose to conduct a Phase II mixed methods randomized controlled trial (RCT) to further evaluate the efficacy of EMPOWER for reducing surrogate symptoms of PTSD and PGD. Surrogates (N=172) will be randomized to EMPOWER (n=86) or a standardized supportive conversation (SC; n=86). Effects of the intervention will be assessed via measures administered pre-intervention (T1), immediately post-intervention (T2), and at 3 months (T3), and 12 months (T4) following the T2 assessment. Investigators will also conduct semi-structured interviews with surrogates (n≈48) to probe intervention effects on mental health and explore contextual factors (e.g., medical mistrust, visitation restrictions) likely to affect surrogates during the pandemic.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
October 11, 2022
End Date
December 11, 2027
Last Updated
6 months ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Patients who, during their hospital stay, have been admitted to the ICU and are near EoL, as indicated by a modified "surprise question" whereby physicians are asked to identify patients whom they do not expect to survive the next 12 months.
  • Surrogate decision-makers of patients who were admitted to the ICU or step-down unit during their current admission/stay, or within 1 month of discharge from their last admission/stay.
  • Surrogate decision-makers are 18 years or older.
  • Surrogate decision-makers whom physicians or advance practice providers (i.e. physician assistants, nurse practitioners) indicate as the designated health care proxy or decision-making patient surrogates, or who are listed as such in the patient's medical charts or by self-report of the surrogate.
  • Surrogate decision-makers must speak English.
  • Surrogate decision-makers must report "syndromal" levels of pre-loss grief (PG-12 score ≥ 25) or peritraumatic distress (PDI ≥ 23).
  • Surrogate decision makers will need to reside in a state in which an interventionist is licensed or otherwise be able to comply with current telehealth regulations.
  • Surrogate decision-makers will need to be willing to utilize a device (computer, tablet, phone) with internet.
  • Surrogate decision-makers who are able and willing to provide an emergency contact.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Patients and surrogate decision-makers who do not meet the eligibility criteria.
  • Surrogate decision-makers who indicate the presence of cognitive impairment based on responses to the Ultra-Brief Confusion Assessment Method and/or significant psychiatric or cognitive disturbance sufficient, in the investigator/study staff's judgment, to preclude completion of the assessment measures, interview or informed consent.
  • Surrogate-decision makers who endorse suicidal ideation in the past month based on responses to the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale.
  • Surrogate-decision makers who are unable to access a functional device for videoconferencing and decline the offer to use a study loner device.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Change of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Time Frame: From baseline through twelve-month follow-up

Symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, as measured by the Impact of Events Scale-Revised, will be compared between groups at baseline through twelve-month follow up assessments . The IES-R consists of 22 items and total score can range from 0 to 88. Higher total scores represent greater symptom burden. Lower scores represent better outcomes.

Change of Prolonged Grief Disorder

Time Frame: from baseline through twelve-month follow-up

Symptoms of prolonged grief disorder, as measured by the Prolonged Grief-13-Revised, will be compared between the week following the intervention, at one month follow-up and at twelve-month follow-up . The PG-13-R consists of 13 items and total score can range from 0 to 62. Higher total scores represent greater symptom burden. Lower scores represent better outcomes.

Change of Anticipatory Grief

Time Frame: from baseline through twelve-month follow-up

Symptoms of anticipatory grief, as measured by the PG-12-R, consists of 12 items using a 5-point Likert scale. Total scores range from 11 to 55, with higher scores representing greater anticipatory grief.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Change of Depression(From baseline through twelve-month follow-up)
  • Change of Regret(From baseline through twelve-month follow-up)
  • Change of Anxiety(From baseline through twelve-month follow-up)
  • Change of Peritraumatic Distress(1 week following the intervention through twelve-month follow-up .)

Study Sites (3)

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