The CDR Implementation Trial
Primary Purpose
Pediatric Abusive Head Trauma
Status
Completed
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
United States
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Application of a validated Clinical Decision Rule (CDR) as an AHT screening tool
Sponsored by
About this trial
This is an interventional screening trial for Pediatric Abusive Head Trauma
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Children under 3 years of age admitted to a PICU for management of symptomatic, acute, closed, traumatic, cranial, or intracranial injuries confirmed by computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients admitted to a PICU with acute head injuries resulting from a collision involving a motor vehicle.
- Patients admitted to a PICU with acute head injuries and clear evidence on neuroimaging of pre-existing brain malformation, disease, infection, or hypoxia-ischemia.
Sites / Locations
- Connecticut Children's Medical Center
- Wesley Hospital
- Children's Mercy Hospital
- University of Nebraska Medical Cneter and Children's Hospital of Omaha
- Texas Children's Hospital, Baylor College of Medicine
- University of Texas health Sciences Center at San Antonio
- Primary Children's Hospital
- Children's Hospital of Richmond, Virginia Commonwealth University
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm Type
Experimental
No Intervention
Arm Label
Intervention Sites
Control Sites
Arm Description
At the four intervention sites, investigators will deploy active, multifaceted, implementation strategies designed to promote CDR acceptability and application as an AHT screening tool. These strategies will include physician training with onsite visits, monthly "booster training emails," access to an "AHT probability calculator," audit and site-specific feedback, and local "information sharing sessions" designed to address local barriers to CDR acceptance and application.
At the four matched control sites, physicians will engage in "AHT screening as usual."
Outcomes
Primary Outcome Measures
The Number of Higher Risk Patients Evaluated Thoroughly for Abuse at Intervention vs. Control Sites
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the percentage of patients that the clinical decision rule stratified as higher risk who were evaluated thoroughly for abuse (with both skeletal survey and retinal exam) at intervention vs. control sites. We hypothesized that thorough evaluations of higher risk patients would be significantly higher at intervention sites.
The Number of Lower Risk Patients Evaluated Even Partially for Abuse at Intervention vs. Control Sites
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the percentage of patients that the clinical decision rule stratified as lower risk who were nevertheless evaluated at least partially for abuse (with skeletal survey and/or retinal examination) at intervention vs. control sites. We hypothesized that (partial or complete) abuse evaluations of lower risk patients would be significantly lower at intervention sites.
Estimated Rates (Percentages) of Missed AHT at Intervention vs. Control Sites
This outcome measures and compares estimated rates (percentages) of missed AHT (among all patients with AHT) at intervention vs. control sites. Using secondary outcome measures, it was calculated as [estimated cases of missed AHT] / [estimated cases of missed AHT + patients with corroborating findings of abuse]. We hypothesized that the estimated rate of missed AHT would be significantly lower at intervention sites. This outcome measure is best interpreted in the following contexts: (1) Applied accurately and consistently, the clinical decision rule's potential sensitivity for AHT is 96% (see references). That is, it should "miss" (categorize as lower risk) only 4% of AHT patients, and (2) We estimate that intervention and control site physicians "missed" 15% and 11% of their AHT patients, respectively, in prior PediBIRN studies (see the Post-Hoc Outcome "The Estimated Rate of Missed AHT at Intervention vs. Control Sites in Prior PediBIRN Studies").
Secondary Outcome Measures
The Number of Patients Evaluated at Least Partially for Abuse at Intervention vs. Control Sites
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the percentage of patients evaluated at least partially for abuse (with skeletal survey and/or retinal examination) at intervention vs. control sites. Thus, it facilitates a broad-based comparison of AHT evaluation practices at intervention vs. control sites.
The Number of Patients With Corroborating Findings of Abuse at Intervention vs. Control Sites (Aka Overall Diagnostic Yield)
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the percentage of patients whose completed skeletal surveys and/or retinal exams revealed findings considered moderately or highly specific for abuse at intervention vs. control sites. Thus, it is also a measure of the overall diagnostic yield of patients' completed skeletal surveys and retinal examinations.
The Number of Potential Cases of Missed AHT at Intervention vs. Control Sites
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the percentage of eligible patients who might be potential cases of missed AHT (that is, patients lacking skeletal survey and/or retinal exam, whose abuse evaluation is therefore incomplete) at intervention vs. control sites.
The Number of Estimated Patients With Missed AHT at Intervention vs. Control Sites
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the estimated percentage of patients with missed AHT (among potential cases of missed AHT) at intervention vs. control sites. It was calculated as [potential cases of missed AHT] x [their mean estimate of abuse probability]. The patient-specific estimates of abuse probability used to calculate the mean estimates were accessed by applying the 4-variable rule as a clinical prediction tool (rather than a directive decision rule).
Estimated Prevalence of AHT at Intervention vs. Control Sites
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the estimated prevalence of AHT (among all eligible patients) at intervention vs. control sites. It was calculated as [patients with corroborating findings of abuse + estimated cases of missed AHT] / [all eligible patients in each arm of the trial].
Full Information
NCT ID
NCT03162354
First Posted
May 12, 2017
Last Updated
November 18, 2020
Sponsor
Milton S. Hershey Medical Center
Collaborators
National Institutes of Health (NIH), Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
1. Study Identification
Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT03162354
Brief Title
The CDR Implementation Trial
Official Title
Implementation Trial of a Validated Clinical Decision Rule for Pediatric Abusive Head Trauma (NIH Grant Number P50HD089922)
Study Type
Interventional
2. Study Status
Record Verification Date
November 2020
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
August 1, 2017 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
March 31, 2020 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
March 31, 2020 (Actual)
3. Sponsor/Collaborators
Responsible Party, by Official Title
Principal Investigator
Name of the Sponsor
Milton S. Hershey Medical Center
Collaborators
National Institutes of Health (NIH), Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
4. Oversight
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
Yes
5. Study Description
Brief Summary
To increase the accuracy of doctors' decisions to launch or forgo child abuse evaluations in their young, acutely head-injured patients, investigators have derived and validated a clinical decision rule (CDR) that detects abusive head trauma (AHT) with 96% sensitivity in pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) settings. This "CDR Implementation Trial" across eight PICU sites will assess the CDR's actual impact on AHT screening accuracy, identify factors associated with maximal physician acceptance and application of this novel AHT screening tool, and assess the sustainability of active CDR implementation strategies.
Detailed Description
Investigators' long-term goal is to increase the accuracy of doctors' decisions to launch or forgo child abuse evaluations in their young, acutely head-injured patients. To this end, PediBIRN investigators have derived and validated a 4-variable clinical decision rule (CDR) that detects abusive head trauma (AHT) with 96% sensitivity in PICU settings. Applied at PICU admission, the CDR categorizes young, acutely head-injured patients as higher risk vs. lower risk, and recommends thorough abuse evaluations for all higher risk patients.
The "CDR Implementation Trial" across eight PICUs will assess the CDR's actual impact on AHT screening accuracy. The stratified cluster randomized trial design will facilitate direct comparison of child abuse evaluations at four, randomly selected, control sites to four matched intervention sites, where investigators will deploy active, multifaceted, implementation strategies designed to promote CDR acceptability and application. These strategies will include physician training with onsite visits, monthly "booster training emails," access to an "AHT probability calculator," audit and site-specific feedback, and local "information sharing sessions" designed to address local barriers to CDR acceptance and application.
PediBIRN investigators will conduct the CDR Implementation Trial with three Specific Aims. Aim 1 is to assess the CDR's actual impact on AHT screening accuracy. Investigators hypothesize that deployment of CDR implementation strategies at the four intervention sites will be associated with higher percentages of higher risk patients evaluated thoroughly for abuse, and lower percentages of lower risk patients evaluated (even partially) for abuse. Aim 2 is to identify factors that impact CDR application in PICU settings. Investigators hypothesize that PICUs with higher patient volumes, providers with child abuse expertise, and providers with more intense exposure to CDR implementation strategies will be predictive of higher percentages of higher risk patients thoroughly evaluated for abuse, whereas patients of minority race or ethnicity will be predictive of higher percentages of lower risk patients evaluated for abuse. Investigators' third Exploratory Aim is to measure the sustained impacts of CDR implementation strategies. Investigators hypothesize that CDR utilization at intervention sites will be sustained twelve months after CDR implementation strategies have been discontinued.
Based on strong Preliminary Studies, investigators predict that CDR adoption as an AHT screening tool will increase AHT detection; reduce overall abuse evaluations and their associated risks; reduce unwarranted variation in current AHT screening practices; minimize the adverse impacts of doctors' inherent biases, uncertainty, and practice disparities; reduce AHT-associated acute health care costs in PICU settings; and save the lives of children who will be reinjured and killed if their AHT is missed or unrecognized.
6. Conditions and Keywords
Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Pediatric Abusive Head Trauma
7. Study Design
Primary Purpose
Screening
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Parallel Assignment
Model Description
The stratified cluster randomized trial design will facilitate direct comparison of child abuse evaluations at four, randomly selected, control sites to four matched intervention sites, where investigators will deploy active, multifaceted, implementation strategies designed to promote CDR acceptability and application.
Masking
Outcomes Assessor
Masking Description
The study statistician will remain blinded to PICU site group membership (control vs. intervention sites).
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
420 (Actual)
8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions
Arm Title
Intervention Sites
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
At the four intervention sites, investigators will deploy active, multifaceted, implementation strategies designed to promote CDR acceptability and application as an AHT screening tool. These strategies will include physician training with onsite visits, monthly "booster training emails," access to an "AHT probability calculator," audit and site-specific feedback, and local "information sharing sessions" designed to address local barriers to CDR acceptance and application.
Arm Title
Control Sites
Arm Type
No Intervention
Arm Description
At the four matched control sites, physicians will engage in "AHT screening as usual."
Intervention Type
Other
Intervention Name(s)
Application of a validated Clinical Decision Rule (CDR) as an AHT screening tool
Intervention Description
The Clinical Decision Rule (CDR) for AHT reads as follows:
Every acutely head-injured infant or young child hospitalized for intensive care presenting with any one or more of these four variables should be considered "high risk" and thoroughly evaluated for abuse: (1) any clinically significant respiratory compromise at the scene of injury, during transport, in the Emergency Department, or prior to admission; (2) Any bruising involving the child's ear(s), neck, or torso; (3) Any subdural hemorrhage(s) or fluid collection(s) that are bilateral OR involve the interhemispheric space; (4) Any skull fracture(s) other than an isolated, nondiastatic, linear, parietal, skull fracture.
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
The Number of Higher Risk Patients Evaluated Thoroughly for Abuse at Intervention vs. Control Sites
Description
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the percentage of patients that the clinical decision rule stratified as higher risk who were evaluated thoroughly for abuse (with both skeletal survey and retinal exam) at intervention vs. control sites. We hypothesized that thorough evaluations of higher risk patients would be significantly higher at intervention sites.
Time Frame
To be measured 32 months after the start of the clinical trial
Title
The Number of Lower Risk Patients Evaluated Even Partially for Abuse at Intervention vs. Control Sites
Description
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the percentage of patients that the clinical decision rule stratified as lower risk who were nevertheless evaluated at least partially for abuse (with skeletal survey and/or retinal examination) at intervention vs. control sites. We hypothesized that (partial or complete) abuse evaluations of lower risk patients would be significantly lower at intervention sites.
Time Frame
To be measured 32 months after the start of the clinical trial
Title
Estimated Rates (Percentages) of Missed AHT at Intervention vs. Control Sites
Description
This outcome measures and compares estimated rates (percentages) of missed AHT (among all patients with AHT) at intervention vs. control sites. Using secondary outcome measures, it was calculated as [estimated cases of missed AHT] / [estimated cases of missed AHT + patients with corroborating findings of abuse]. We hypothesized that the estimated rate of missed AHT would be significantly lower at intervention sites. This outcome measure is best interpreted in the following contexts: (1) Applied accurately and consistently, the clinical decision rule's potential sensitivity for AHT is 96% (see references). That is, it should "miss" (categorize as lower risk) only 4% of AHT patients, and (2) We estimate that intervention and control site physicians "missed" 15% and 11% of their AHT patients, respectively, in prior PediBIRN studies (see the Post-Hoc Outcome "The Estimated Rate of Missed AHT at Intervention vs. Control Sites in Prior PediBIRN Studies").
Time Frame
To be measured 32 months after the start of the clinical trial
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
The Number of Patients Evaluated at Least Partially for Abuse at Intervention vs. Control Sites
Description
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the percentage of patients evaluated at least partially for abuse (with skeletal survey and/or retinal examination) at intervention vs. control sites. Thus, it facilitates a broad-based comparison of AHT evaluation practices at intervention vs. control sites.
Time Frame
To be measured 32 months after the start of the clinical trial
Title
The Number of Patients With Corroborating Findings of Abuse at Intervention vs. Control Sites (Aka Overall Diagnostic Yield)
Description
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the percentage of patients whose completed skeletal surveys and/or retinal exams revealed findings considered moderately or highly specific for abuse at intervention vs. control sites. Thus, it is also a measure of the overall diagnostic yield of patients' completed skeletal surveys and retinal examinations.
Time Frame
To be measured 32 months after the start of the clinical trial
Title
The Number of Potential Cases of Missed AHT at Intervention vs. Control Sites
Description
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the percentage of eligible patients who might be potential cases of missed AHT (that is, patients lacking skeletal survey and/or retinal exam, whose abuse evaluation is therefore incomplete) at intervention vs. control sites.
Time Frame
To be measured 32 months after the start of the clinical trial
Title
The Number of Estimated Patients With Missed AHT at Intervention vs. Control Sites
Description
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the estimated percentage of patients with missed AHT (among potential cases of missed AHT) at intervention vs. control sites. It was calculated as [potential cases of missed AHT] x [their mean estimate of abuse probability]. The patient-specific estimates of abuse probability used to calculate the mean estimates were accessed by applying the 4-variable rule as a clinical prediction tool (rather than a directive decision rule).
Time Frame
To be measured 32 months after the start of the clinical trial
Title
Estimated Prevalence of AHT at Intervention vs. Control Sites
Description
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the estimated prevalence of AHT (among all eligible patients) at intervention vs. control sites. It was calculated as [patients with corroborating findings of abuse + estimated cases of missed AHT] / [all eligible patients in each arm of the trial].
Time Frame
To be measured 32 months after the start of the clinical trial
Other Pre-specified Outcome Measures:
Title
The Change (From Prior PediBIRN Studies to the Current Clinical Trial) in the Number of Higher Risk Patients Evaluated Thoroughly for Abuse at Intervention Sites
Description
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the percentage of higher risk patients evaluated thoroughly for abuse (with skeletal survey AND retinal examination) at intervention sites in prior strictly observational PediBIRN studies vs. the current cluster randomized trial. It was calculated using precisely equivalent methods and data captured prospectively between 2010 and 2013 in comparable patient cohorts at the same four intervention sites.
Time Frame
To be measured 32 months after the start of the clinical trial
Title
The Change (From Prior PediBIRN Studies to the Current Clinical Trial) in the Number of Potential Cases of Missed AHT at Intervention Sites
Description
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the percentage of potential cases of missed AHT (among all eligible patients) at intervention sites in prior strictly observational PediBIRN studies vs. the current cluster randomized trial. It was calculated using precisely equivalent methods and data captured prospectively between 2010 and 2013 in comparable patient cohorts at the same four intervention sites.
Time Frame
To be measured 32 months after the start of the clinical trial
Title
The Change (From Prior PediBIRN Studies to the Current Clinical Trial) in the Estimated Rate (Percentage) of Missed AHT at Intervention Sites
Description
This outcome measure facilitates a comparison of the estimated rate (percentage) of missed AHT (among all patients with AHT) at intervention sites in prior strictly observational PediBIRN studies vs. the current cluster randomized trial. It was calculated using precisely equivalent methods and data captured prospectively between 2010 and 2013 in comparable patient cohorts at the same four intervention sites.
Time Frame
To be measured 32 months after the start of the clinical trial
Title
The Number of AHT Patients (Among All Patients With AHT) That the CDR Would Have Stratified as Higher Risk if the CDR Had Been Applied Accurately and Consistently (Aka the Clinical Decision Rule's Potential AHT Screening Sensitivity)
Description
This outcome measure facilitates estimation of the clinical decision rule's potential AHT screening sensitivity IF it had been applied accurately and consistently across all eight participating sites. It was calculated based on the following assumptions: (1) All higher risk patients were evaluated thoroughly for abuse with skeletal survey AND retinal exam by an ophthalmologist; Therefore, all cases of AHT among higher risk patients were recognized, and (2) Abuse evaluations were deferred in all lower risk patients; Therefore, all cases of AHT among lower risk patients were missed or unrecognized.
Time Frame
To be measured 32 months after the start of the clinical trial
10. Eligibility
Sex
All
Maximum Age & Unit of Time
3 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Children under 3 years of age admitted to a PICU for management of symptomatic, acute, closed, traumatic, cranial, or intracranial injuries confirmed by computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Exclusion Criteria:
Patients admitted to a PICU with acute head injuries resulting from a collision involving a motor vehicle.
Patients admitted to a PICU with acute head injuries and clear evidence on neuroimaging of pre-existing brain malformation, disease, infection, or hypoxia-ischemia.
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Kent P. Hymel, MD
Organizational Affiliation
Milton S. Hershey Medical Center
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Connecticut Children's Medical Center
City
Hartford
State/Province
Connecticut
ZIP/Postal Code
06106
Country
United States
Facility Name
Wesley Hospital
City
Wichita
State/Province
Kansas
ZIP/Postal Code
67214
Country
United States
Facility Name
Children's Mercy Hospital
City
Kansas City
State/Province
Missouri
ZIP/Postal Code
64108
Country
United States
Facility Name
University of Nebraska Medical Cneter and Children's Hospital of Omaha
City
Omaha
State/Province
Nebraska
ZIP/Postal Code
68114
Country
United States
Facility Name
Texas Children's Hospital, Baylor College of Medicine
City
Houston
State/Province
Texas
ZIP/Postal Code
77030
Country
United States
Facility Name
University of Texas health Sciences Center at San Antonio
City
San Antonio
State/Province
Texas
ZIP/Postal Code
78229
Country
United States
Facility Name
Primary Children's Hospital
City
Salt Lake City
State/Province
Utah
ZIP/Postal Code
84113
Country
United States
Facility Name
Children's Hospital of Richmond, Virginia Commonwealth University
City
Richmond
State/Province
Virginia
ZIP/Postal Code
23298
Country
United States
12. IPD Sharing Statement
Plan to Share IPD
No
Citations:
PubMed Identifier
23314183
Citation
Hymel KP, Willson DF, Boos SC, Pullin DA, Homa K, Lorenz DJ, Herman BE, Graf JM, Isaac R, Armijo-Garcia V, Narang SK; Pediatric Brain Injury Research Network (PediBIRN) Investigators. Derivation of a clinical prediction rule for pediatric abusive head trauma. Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2013 Feb;14(2):210-20. doi: 10.1097/PCC.0b013e3182712b09.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
25404722
Citation
Hymel KP, Armijo-Garcia V, Foster R, Frazier TN, Stoiko M, Christie LM, Harper NS, Weeks K, Carroll CL, Hyden P, Sirotnak A, Truemper E, Ornstein AE, Wang M; Pediatric Brain Injury Research Network (PediBIRN) Investigators. Validation of a clinical prediction rule for pediatric abusive head trauma. Pediatrics. 2014 Dec;134(6):e1537-44. doi: 10.1542/peds.2014-1329. Epub 2014 Nov 17.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
26477871
Citation
Hymel KP, Herman BE, Narang SK, Graf JM, Frazier TN, Stoiko M, Christie LM, Harper NS, Carroll CL, Boos SC, Dias M, Pullin DA, Wang M; Pediatric Brain Injury Research Network (PediBIRN) Investigators; Pediatric Brain Injury Research Network PediBIRN Investigators. Potential Impact of a Validated Screening Tool for Pediatric Abusive Head Trauma. J Pediatr. 2015 Dec;167(6):1375-81.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2015.09.018. Epub 2015 Oct 23.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
33798512
Citation
Hymel KP, Armijo-Garcia V, Musick M, Marinello M, Herman BE, Weeks K, Haney SB, Frazier TN, Carroll CL, Kissoon NN, Isaac R, Foster R, Campbell KA, Tieves KS, Livingston N, Bucher A, Woosley MC, Escamilla-Padilla D, Jaimon N, Kustka L, Wang M, Chinchilli VM, Dias MS, Noll J; Pediatric Brain Injury Research Network (PediBIRN) Investigators. A Cluster Randomized Trial to Reduce Missed Abusive Head Trauma in Pediatric Intensive Care Settings. J Pediatr. 2021 Sep;236:260-268.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2021.03.055. Epub 2021 Mar 31.
Results Reference
derived
Links:
URL
http://www.pedibirn.com
Description
Website for "The CDR Implementation Trial"
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