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Comparing Vasopressin and Adrenaline in Patients With Cardiac Arrest

Phase 3
Completed
Conditions
Cardiac Arrest
Interventions
Registration Number
NCT00358579
Lead Sponsor
Singapore General Hospital
Brief Summary

The effectiveness of medications in cardiac arrest has been greatly debated and questioned. Historically intravenous adrenaline has been the drug of choice since 1906. There have been few formal evaluations to determine the value of adrenaline for cardiac arrest, and clinical trials have not been able to show any benefit with intravenous adrenaline (compared to placebo or no treatment) in the field.

Thus the purpose of this study is to compare vasopressin and adrenaline in the treatment of cardiac arrest to answer the question whether there is an improvement in survival between vasopressin and adrenaline.

Detailed Description

The effectiveness of medications in cardiac arrest has been greatly debated and questioned. Historically intravenous adrenaline has been the recommended drug of choice since 1906. There have been few formal evaluations to determine the value of adrenaline for cardiac arrest, and clinical trials have not been able to show any benefit with intravenous adrenaline (compared to placebo or no treatment) in the field.

More recently, vasopressin has been used in patients with cardiac arrest. In human studies on vasopressin, clinical trials have produced conflicting results.

The current study compared vasopressin and adrenaline in the treatment of cardiac arrest in patients presenting to the Emergency Department (ED). Specific outcomes included return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) (as measured by the presence of a palpable pulse at any time during resuscitation), survival to hospital admission, survival to discharge from hospital, and functional status at discharge and at one year (as measured by the Glasgow-Pittsburgh outcome categories).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
727
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patient with cardiac arrest as confirmed by the absence of a pulse, unresponsiveness and apnea
  • Age above 16 (Age 21 and above for CGH only)
Read More
Exclusion Criteria
  • Traumatic cardiac arrest
  • Age 16 and below (Age 20 and below for CGH only)
  • CPR is contraindicated
Read More

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
AdrenalineAdrenaline-
VasopressinVasopressin-
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Survival to Hospital Discharge.at 30 days post arrest

Survival to hospital discharge is defined as the patient leaving the hospital alive or survival to 30 days post cardiac arrest,whichever came first. This therefore measures the number of participants who was discharged alive or survived to 30 days post cardiac arrest, whichever came first.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Neurological Status on Discharge or at 30 Days Post Arrest, if Not Discharged.at 30 days post arrest

Neurological status is assessed by the Glasgow-Pittsburgh outcome categories, to evaluate quality of life after successful resuscitation. Good neurological status is defined as cerebral performance categories(CPC)/overall performance categories(OPC):1 and 2.CPC/OPC 1 indicates good cerebral \& overall performance. CPC/OPC 2 indicates moderate cerebral \& overall disability. CPC/OPC 3 indicates severe cerebral \& overall disability. CPC/OPC 4 indicates coma, vegetative state. CPC/OPC 5 indicates brain dead/death.

Neurological Status at 1 Year.at 1 year post arrest

Neurological status is assessed by the Glasgow-Pittsburgh outcome categories, to evaluate quality of life after successful resuscitation. Good neurological status is defined as cerebral performance categories(CPC)/overall performance categories(OPC): 1 and 2. CPC/OPC 1 indicates good cerebral \& overall performance. CPC/OPC 2 indicates moderate cerebral \& overall disability. CPC/OPC 3 indicates severe cerebral \& overall disability. CPC/OPC 4 indicates coma, vegetative state. CPC/OPC 5 indicates brain dead/death.

Return of Spontaneous Circulation.during resuscitation

Return of spontaneous circulation is defined as the presence of any palpable pulse detected by manual palpation of a major artery. This is measured as number of participants who had return of spontaneous circulation during resuscitation.

Survival to Admission.No specific time frame. Survival to admission refers to sustained return of spontaneous circulation until admission and transfer of care to Intensive Care Units /wards

Survival to admission is defined as the presence of pulse on admission to hospital (discharged from Emergency Department and admitted to Intensive Care Units /wards). This measures the number of participants with pulse and who were admitted to hospital.

Trial Locations

Locations (4)

Changi General Hospital

πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡¬

Singapore, Singapore

Singapore General Hospital

πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡¬

Singapore, Singapore

National University Hospital

πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡¬

Singapore, Singapore

Alexandra Hospital

πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡¬

Singapore, Singapore

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