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Endoscopic Evaluation of the Paediatric Airway After Prior Prolonged (>24 h) Tracheal Intubation

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Intubation
Endoscopy
Interventions
Procedure: Endoscopy
Registration Number
NCT02350933
Lead Sponsor
University Children's Hospital, Zurich
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether possible damages of the trachea caused by a prior prolonged intubation (\> 24h) can be observed by rigid endoscopy of the trachea and if cuffed tracheal tubes cause less damages than cuffed tubes.

Detailed Description

The aim of the study is to systematically evaluate airway injury by rigid endoscopy in children (1 month to 16 years of age) with previous prolonged (\> 24h) tracheal intubation with a special focus on whether their trachea was intubated with a cuffed or an uncuffed tracheal tube.

After induction of anaesthesia and obtaining venous access, neuromuscular blocking agents are administered and facemask pre-oxygenation occurs for 2 minutes. Direct laryngoscopy is then performed in the preoxygenated, paralysed and conventionally monitored patient to obtain a direct vision. Then a rigid endoscope with endoscopy camera is carefully guided through the larynx down to the carina and drawn back under monitor vision with electronic recording.

An International Study Board Committee (assessor board) will assess the endoscopic records in a blinded manner using a systematic grading system.

Beside tracheal tube type, factors such as intubator, sedation management, age, length of intubation, nasal or oral intubation and time point of endoscopy will affect presence, absence or incidence of potential airway injuries caused by prolonged tracheal intubation. Thus it is difficult to perform a power calculation to figure out number of patients to demonstrate or exclude a statistically significant difference between tube types. Using the incidence of subglottic stenosis, as the worst case scenario outcome after longterm intubation, an incidence of less than 2 % seems to be reasonable in uncuffed tracheal tubes.So the primary hypothesis to be tested is equivalence in major complication rates defined as subglottic stenosis comparing cuffed versus uncuffed tracheal tubes.

Specifically, the primary hypothesis relates to the main outcome criteria of this study, which is subglottic stenosis after longterm intubation. The null-hypothesis Ho is defined as no difference in the incidence rates of subglottic stenosis between cuffed and uncuffed groups. The null-hypothesis (Ho: μ-Diff = 0) will be compared with the alternative hypothesis (H1: μ-Diff \<\> 0). The study is designed to detect a clinically unacceptable deterioration of 4% above the baseline airway-injury rate of 2% when using uncuffed tubes with a power of 80% and a type I error probability of less than 5%. Sample sizes of 376 from the cuffed group and 376 from the uncuffed group achieve 80% power at a 5% significance level using a one-sided equivalence test of proportions when the proportion in the standard group (uncuffed TT) is 0.02 and the proportion in the experimental group (cuffed TT) being tested for equivalence is 0.02 and the maximum allowable increase between these proportions that still results in equivalence (the range of equivalence) is 0.04. In total 1000 patients with prior long-term intubation (\> 24 hours) using a cuffed (500) or an uncuffed (500) tracheal tube will be recruited / included from different study centres.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1000
Inclusion Criteria
  • Planned elective intervention/surgery/diagnostics/endoscopy and general anaesthesia with airway instrumentation involving muscle paralysis in children, aged 1 month (UK) or from birth (other centers) to 16 years having prior prolonged (≥ 24h) tracheal intubation (s) during ICU-stay (s) within the study centre (patients for diagnosis/treatment of stridor are also included (see exclusion criteria also below)).
  • No known risk for regurgitation
  • Written parental consent
  • American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status < IV
Exclusion Criteria
  • No parental written consent
  • Known airway anomalies associated with syndromes
  • Known or suspected difficult intubation
  • Emergency surgery or intervention
  • Full stomach and/or at risk for regurgitation
  • ASA physical status IV and higher
  • Patients with current or prior tracheostomy
  • Known, suspected or potential cervical spine pathology (e.g. Down's Syndrome)
  • Insufficient clinical details from previous prolonged intubation

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
0° rigid endoscopeEndoscopyEndoscopy of the trachea is performed using a 0° rigid endoscope
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of patients with evidence of subglottic stenosis after longterm intubation with cuffed versus uncuffed tracheal tubesAfter an average induction period of 10 min of an anesthesia with a planned intubation after the endoscopy

An International Study Board Committee (assessor board) will assess the endoscopic records in a blinded manner using a systematic grading system.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Numbers of prior intubationsRetrospective data analysis of former intubations is performed within two years after the endoscopy

Numbers of shortterm and prolonged (\>24h) and numbers of intubations with cuffed and uncuffed tubes are listed

Reason for prior longterm intubationRetrospective data analysis of former intubations is performed within two years after the endoscopy

Reason for prior longterm intubation is look up in patient's medical records.

Route of prior longterm intubationRetrospective data analysis of former intubations is performed within two years after the endoscopy

Route of prior longterm intubation (nasal or oral) is look up in patient's medical records.

Duration of prior longterm intubationRetrospective data analysis of former intubations is performed within two years after the endoscopy
Maximal cuff pressure during prior longterm intubationRetrospective data analysis of former intubations is performed within two years after the endoscopy

Maximal cuff pressure in cmH2O during longterm intubation is look up in patient's medical records.

Number of patients with a stridor event after extubation of prior longterm intubationRetrospective data analysis of former intubations is performed within two years after the endoscopy
Tube type used for prior longterm intubationRetrospective data analysis of former intubations is performed within two years after the endoscopy

Tube type used for prior longterm intubation (cuffed or uncuffed) is look up in patient's medical records.

Tube size used for prior longterm intubationRetrospective data analysis of former intubations is performed within two years after the endoscopy

Tube size (inner diameter) used for prior longterm intubation is look up in patient's medical records.

Site of prior longterm intubationRetrospective data analysis of former intubations is performed within two years after the endoscopy

Site of prior longterm intubation is look up in patient's medical records.

Tube brand used for prior longterm intubationRetrospective data analysis of former intubations is performed within two years after the endoscopy

Tube brand used for prior longterm intubation is look up in patient's medical records.

Trial Locations

Locations (5)

Kinderkrankenhaus Amsterdamer Straße

🇩🇪

Köln, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany

Asklepios Kinderklinik Sankt Augustin

🇩🇪

Sankt Augustin, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany

Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust

🇬🇧

London, United Kingdom

University Children's Hospital

🇨🇭

Zurich, Switzerland

Erasmus Medical Center, Sophia Children's Hospital

🇳🇱

Rotterdam, Netherlands

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