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Patient Important Gastrointestinal Bleeding in the ICU

Completed
Conditions
Gastro Intestinal Bleeding
Patient Engagement
Family Members
Registration Number
NCT05506150
Lead Sponsor
McMaster University
Brief Summary

This study will engage patients and families to create a definition of what matters most to them about upper gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding. This information will help to define the outcome of "patient-important GI bleeding" which is a secondary endpoint for the ongoing international randomized trial REVISE (NCT03374800), comparing acid suppression versus no acid suppression in the intensive care unit (ICU). Other outcomes in REVISE are clinically important upper GI bleeding, mortality, pneumonia and Clostridioides difficile infection. Guided by patient and family input, a series of open-ended questions will elicit patient and family views about what matters most about this complication in interviews and focus groups. The investigators will develop the definition of "patient-important GI bleeding" by analyzing interview and focus group transcripts of critically ill survivors and family members of critically ill patients who may or may not have had GI bleeding, and who were not enrolled in the REVISE trial. Patient and family perspectives (anticipated to be different from what clinicians consider to be clinically important GI bleeding), will be used to refine a new trial outcome for research on GI bleeding in the intensive care unit (ICU). Also, study results will help clinicians understand how to better support patients and families; to explain testing and treatment options when GI bleeding occurs in practice in the ICU.

Detailed Description

This is a parallel mixed-methods multi-center study.

Design: This is a parallel mixed-methods multi-center study in which the qualitative data are dominant and patient and family involvement is paramount. Data collection will be quantitative and qualitative interviews and focus groups. The objective is to elicit views from patients and families regarding the features of a GI bleed that are important to patients. The investigators will recruit 6-10 patients and 6-10 family members for individual interviews, along with 6-10 focus groups consisting of 3-4 patients and family members.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
51
Inclusion Criteria
  • Was admitted to an ICU, whether or not a GI bleed developed in the ICU
  • > 18 years of age

Family Member Inclusion Criteria:

  • Family members of ICU patients whose loved one was in the ICU for at least 72 hours, whether or not their family member developed a GI bleed
  • > 18 years of age

Patient/Family Member

Exclusion Criteria
  • Prohibitive communication challenges (e.g., serious psychological or psychiatric illness in the patient and/or family, inability of patient and/or family to communicate reasonably well in English or other languages for which an interpreter exists - professional staff or otherwise);
  • Patient or family declines.
  • Family member whose loved one died in ICU

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Feasibility of enrolmentThrough study completion; an average of 1 year

Enrolment will be deemed feasible when the following criteria are met: a) at least 15 surviving critically ill patients and 15 family members have been recruited; b) at least 8 focus groups have been completed; c) Representation of patients and families from several regions served by academic health sciences centres; 4) 80% participation rate for invited patients and families

GI Bleeding characteristics important to patients and familiesThrough study completion; an average of 1 year

While clinically important GI bleeding is defined in research as bleeding accompanied by hemodynamic consequences, red blood cell transfusions or other invasive interventions, the concept of patient-important upper GI bleeding has not been developed for the ICU. In this study, the investigators will elicit views using open-ended questions about the tests and treatments about GI bleeding of greatest concern. This information will be analyzed inductively to develop and/or refine a new patient-centred definition of important bleeding. The investigators hypothesize that the GI bleed characteristics which are relevant to patients and families will not be the same as those relevant to clinicians. The inductive analysis involves the generation of categories and domains directly from the data, without pre-conceived notions of what these categories or domains might be.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

St Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton

🇨🇦

Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

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