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Home Initiation of Noninvasive Positive Pressure Ventilation in Children With Medical Complexity

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Sleep-Disordered Breathing
Interventions
Other: Home Initiation of NiPPV
Registration Number
NCT05881031
Lead Sponsor
The Hospital for Sick Children
Brief Summary

Children with medical complexity (CMC) often have trouble breathing at night and need to use a breathing machine. This breathing machine is called noninvasive positive pressure ventilation (NiPPV). The use of NiPPV has been shown to improve quality of life and survival in children. Before it is used, NiPPV must first be tested to see what the correct 'machine settings' are for each child. This is usually done in the sleep laboratory at the hospital during a one-night stay. However, sleep studies in the hospital are disruptive and hard for CMC and their families because of the new environment and limited access to the equipment, supplies, comfort items and the routine their child has at home. Patients and families would prefer to start NiPPV at home but there needs to be more research on this to make sure it is possible and safe. This study will evaluate a new model of care to start NiPPV in the home. CMC aged 5-17 years old and starting NiPPV will be assigned at random, like a coin toss, to start NiPPV in the home or to start NiPPV in the sleep laboratory. The investigators will assess the feasibility and safety of the two ways to start NiPPV. This study will be the first step towards developing a study to evaluate if home NiPPV starts are effective. Starting NiPPV at home has the potential to improve the use of NiPPV (ie early adherence predicts long-term use) resulting in both medical benefits as well as improved quality of life for CMC and their families.

Detailed Description

Children with medical complexity (CMC) are increasingly prescribed noninvasive positive pressure ventilation (NiPPV) for chronic respiratory failure. In our clinical experience, patients and families would prefer NiPPV initiation in the home environment but this is not standard of care. This proposal will evaluate the feasibility and safety of an innovative model of care for NiPPV initiation in the home environment utilizing remote telemonitoring compared to usual care which is in-hospital polysomnography (PSG) laboratory-based initiation.

The incidence of CMC requiring NiPPV is exponentially growing. NiPPV effectively corrects abnormal gas exchange, improves sleep quality, and reduces symptoms of chronic respiratory failure. The use of NiPPV has been associated with increased survival and improved health-related quality of life (HRQOL). To ensure effectiveness, NiPPV must be used for all periods of sleep and settings must be individually-titrated. Unfortunately, poor adherence results in many CMC being undertreated for chronic respiratory failure. Successful NiPPV initiation is critical because early negative experiences are commonly reported barriers to adherence6 and early usage predicts longer term use. Standard of care is the initiation and titration of NiPPV during a one-night in-hospital PSG. A PSG is challenging for CMC and families due to their medical fragility and lasting effects of travel and a disrupted routine, the significant amount of equipment and supplies that must be brought to the study as well as the financial implications and additional psychosocial stress for caregivers. In addition, negative experiences with NiPPV may be exacerbated by introduction of the therapy in an unfamiliar PSG laboratory with burdensome monitoring. Furthermore, a one-night PSG provides limited sleep data that may not be representative of dynamic and variable sleeping patterns that occur in the comfort of one's home.

Recent technological advances in remote NiPPV monitoring coupled with a shift to virtual care models has enabled a patient and family centered opportunity to bypass the PSG laboratory and initiate NiPPV at home. Remote NiPPV monitoring extends data collection beyond discrete health care encounters and provides real-time data on adherence and efficacy that can be wirelessly transmitted to facilitate setting adjustment by clinicians. Home NiPPV initiation is increasingly being requested by patients and caregivers. The potential benefits of this innovative care model include increasing patient and family empowerment, improving the delivery of high quality patient-centred care at home, and optimizing NiPPV use. Although there is growing data in the adult population to support home NiPPV initiation via telemonitoring, this cannot be simply extrapolated to CMC. There are key differences in the etiology and manifestation of chronic respiratory failure in CMC compared to adults. Furthermore, family caregivers play an important role in NiPPV acceptance and adherence.

Canadian guidelines acknowledge the lack of evidence for the setting in which NiPPV is initiated. Home NiPPV initiation in CMC is a novel model of care that may result in large health system impacts, but requires a feasibility study before embarking on a large-scale trial.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
24
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Age 5-17 years old
  2. Newly prescribed NiPPV
  3. Tolerated awake NiPPV trial
  4. Provides informed consent
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Cardiac disease at risk of hemodynamic instability with NiPPV initiation (eg cardiac dysfunction (ejection fraction <45%), pulmonary hypertension (mean pulmonary artery pressure ≥ 20 mmHg on right heart catheterization or suggestive echocardiogram findings in the opinion of a pediatric cardiologist), or single ventricle)
  2. At high risk of complications with NiPPV in the opinion of the child's physician (eg pneumothorax and aspiration risk)
  3. Severe sleep disordered breathing with peak CO2 ≥ 60mmHg or apnea-hypopnea index (AHI)≥ 30/hr (AHI measures the number of respiratory events per hour)
  4. Participation in concurrent research study that may affect NiPPV adherence (proposed primary outcome of full study)
  5. Exclusion of study participants if the caregiver or participant is not English speaking

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Home Initiation of NiPPVHome Initiation of NiPPVNiPPV settings will be titrated during an awake NiPPV trial by the respiratory therapist. Once NiPPV equipment is obtained and NiPPV is used at home (time 0), further titration of the NiPPV settings will occur on an outpatient basis guided by remote telemonitoring and home overnight oximetries at 1, 4, and 12 weeks. Additional titration of NiPPV settings may be guided by reported participant symptoms and comfort, as per standard of care. Participants will complete an in-hospital PSG after 12 weeks, during which NiPPV settings are titrated during the night by a PSG technologist to determine optimal settings according to current international guidelines.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Recruitment and retention rate2 years

Feasibility outcome.

The recruitment rate is the proportion of eligible people recruited to the trial. This is the number of people randomised divided by the number of people eligible.

The retention rate is the proportion of randomised people who complete follow up at 3 months (end of trial).

Proportion of eligible patients randomized2 years

Feasibility outcome. Proportion of eligible participants who are recruited to the study and randomized

Proportion of patients that crossover based on safety criteria2 years

Safety outcome. Proportion of patients in the intervention arm who crossover to the control arm based on pre-specified monitoring criteria

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Mean minutes of nightly NiPPV usage12 weeks

Proposed trial outcome. Adherence will be determined adjectively using ventilator download data.

Proxy-reported Psychological Scale (percentage rank)4 weeks

Proposed trial outcome. The proxy-reported Psychological Scale from the KIDSCREEN-52 questionnaire will be used. The percentage rank range is 0-100, with lower scores indicating a "dissatisfaction with life".

Self-Reported Psychological Scale (percentage rank)4 weeks

Proposed trial outcome. The self-reported Psychological Scale from the KIDSCREEN-52 questionnaire will be used. The percentage rank range is 0-100, with lower scores indicating a "dissatisfaction with life".

Proxy-reported Psychological Scale (T-value)4 weeks

Proposed trial outcome. The proxy-reported Psychological Scale from the KIDSCREEN-52 questionnaire will be used. The T-values have a mean of 50 and standard deviation of 10. Higher T-values indicate a higher quality of life.

Difference in expiratory positive airway pressure based on home NiPPV titration and PSG titration in the intervention arm12 weeks

Safety outcome. Comparison of final NiPPV settings at 12 weeks in the intervention arm and PSG prescribed NiPPV settings at 12 weeks and beyond.

Self-Reported Psychological Scale (T-value)4weeks

Proposed trial outcome. The self-reported Psychological Scale from the KIDSCREEN-52 questionnaire will be used. The T-values have a mean of 50 and standard deviation of 10. Higher T-values indicate a higher quality of life.

Caregiver reported Sense of Mastery4 weeks

Proposed trial outcome. The Pearlin Mastery Scale will be used to measure parental mastery. Scores range from 7 to 28, with higher scores indicating greater levels of mastery.

Patient and family study experience, preference of intervention and barriers12 weeks

Feasibility and acceptability outcome. Based on optional qualitative interview with participant and/or caregiver after completion of study procedures.

Difference in inspiratory positive airway pressure based on home NiPPV titration and PSG titration in the intervention arm12 weeks

Safety outcome. Comparison of final NiPPV settings at 12 weeks in the intervention arm and PSG prescribed NiPPV settings at 12 weeks and beyond.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

The Hospital for Sick Children

🇨🇦

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

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