Seitz Kevin P, Lloyd Bradley D, Wang Li, Shotwell Matthew S, Qian Edward T, Richardson Roger K, Rooks Jeffery C, Hennings-Williams Vanessa, Sandoval Claire E, Richardson Whitney D, Morgan Tracy, Thompson Amber N, Hastings Pamela G, Ring Terry P, Stollings Joanna L, Talbot Erica M, Krasinski David J, Decoursey Bailey, Gibbs Kevin W, Self Wesley H, Mixon Amanda S, Rice Todd W, Semler Matthew W, Casey Jonathan D
Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Department of Medicine, Division of Allergy, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Nashville, TN.
Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Nashville, TN.
medRxiv. 2023 Jul 24:2023.07.21.23292998. doi: 10.1101/2023.07.21.23292998.
For every critically ill adult receiving invasive mechanical ventilation, clinicians must select a mode of ventilation. The mode of ventilation determines whether the ventilator directly controls the tidal volume or the inspiratory pressure. Newer hybrid modes allow clinicians to set a target tidal volume, for which the ventilator controls and adjusts the inspiratory pressure. A strategy of low tidal volumes and low plateau pressure improves outcomes, but the optimal mode to achieve these targets is not known.
The Mode of Ventilation During Critical Illness (MODE) trial is a cluster-randomized, multiple-crossover pilot trial being conducted in the medical intensive care unit (ICU) at an academic center. The MODE trial compares the use of volume control, pressure control, and adaptive pressure control. The study ICU is assigned to a single ventilator mode (volume control versus pressure control versus adaptive pressure control) for continuous mandatory ventilation during each 1-month study block. The assigned mode switches every month in a randomly generated sequence. The primary outcome is ventilator-free days (VFDs) to study day 28, defined as the number of days alive and free of invasive mechanical ventilation from the final receipt of mechanical ventilation to 28 days after enrollment. Enrollment began November 1, 2022 and will end on July 31, 2023.
The trial was approved by the Vanderbilt University Medical Center institutional review board (IRB# 220446). Results of this study will be submitted to a peer-reviewed journal and presented at scientific conferences.
The trial was registered with clinicaltrials.gov on October 3, 2022, prior to initiation of patient enrollment on November 1, 2022 (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT05563779).
对于每一位接受有创机械通气的重症成年患者,临床医生都必须选择一种通气模式。通气模式决定了呼吸机是直接控制潮气量还是吸气压力。更新的混合模式允许临床医生设定目标潮气量,呼吸机据此控制并调整吸气压力。低潮气量和低平台压策略可改善预后,但实现这些目标的最佳模式尚不清楚。
重症期间通气模式(MODE)试验是一项在学术中心的医学重症监护病房(ICU)进行的整群随机、多次交叉试点试验。MODE试验比较容量控制、压力控制和自适应压力控制的使用情况。在每个为期1个月的研究阶段,研究ICU被分配到一种单一的通气模式(容量控制与压力控制与自适应压力控制)用于持续强制通气。指定的模式每月按照随机生成的顺序切换。主要结局是至研究第28天的无呼吸机天数(VFD),定义为从最后一次接受机械通气至入组后28天内存活且未进行有创机械通气的天数。入组于2022年11月1日开始,将于2023年7月31日结束。
该试验已获得范德堡大学医学中心机构审查委员会批准(IRB# 220446)。本研究结果将提交给同行评审期刊,并在科学会议上展示。
该试验于2022年10月3日在clinicaltrials.gov注册,先于2022年11月1日开始患者入组(ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT05563779)。