RCT: Trazodone vs Quetiapine vs Placebo for Treating ICU Delirium (TraQ) (TraQ)
Delirium, Morality, Quality of Life
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Delirium focused on measuring delirium, quetiapine, trazodone, critical care, ICU delirium
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- >=18-years-old
- Admitted to the surgical ICU for >24 hours
- Written informed consent obtained from the patient or their surrogate decision maker.
- Diagnosis of ICU delirium defined by positive CAM-ICU score AND exhibiting symptomatic delirium (i.e., combative, pulling at lines, a danger to self or others, inability to sleep, hallucinations, etc.), thus, requiring the need for pharmacologic intervention as determined by the attending intensivist
Exclusion Criteria:
- Acute alcohol or substance abuse withdrawal symptoms/syndrome (i.e., delirium tremens) requiring treatment/intervention (i.e., implementation of the Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol (CIWA) protocol, benzodiazepines, alpha-2 agonist, etc.)
- Recent torsade de pointes or ventricular arrhythmia
- Prolonged QTc syndrome AND/OR prolonged QT-interval (QTc>500 ms on baseline EKG, performed on the day of randomization)
- Active psychosis
- Patients taking medications with known interactions with either trazodone and/or quetiapine
- Acute encephalopathy (i.e., hepatic, uremic, etc.)
- Seizure disorder
- myocardial infarction (MI) within the past 30 days
- Tardive dyskinesia
- Hyponatremia
- Terminal state
- Diagnosis of liver disease
- Patients who are strict NPO, are a high aspiration risk (defined as frequent nausea/vomiting, ileus, gastric dysmotility disorder, uncontrolled GERD, weakness/deconditioning, diabetes with gastroparesis, not tolerating full tube feeds if being enterally fed (high residual gastric volume >500 cc), elderly patients with waxing/waning mental status), have dysphagia, and/or have difficulty swallowing capsules as determined by speech therapist
- Patients who have enteral access such as a small-bore feeding tube, nasogastric or orogastric tube, or gastrostomy/gastrojejunostomy tube (as these patients will need medications crushed in order to administer via the tube, and the capsules used in this study cannot be crushed)
- Presence of an acute neurologic condition (i.e., acute cerebrovascular accident, intracranial tumor, traumatic brain injury, etc.) on ICU admission. History of stroke or other neurological condition(s) without cognitive impairment is not an exclusion criterion.
- Pregnancy/lactation
- History of ventricular arrhythmia including torsade de pointes
- Allergy/hypersensitivity reaction to trazodone and/or quetiapine
- Diagnosis of dementia
- History of neuroleptic malignant syndrome and/or serotonin syndrome
- Diagnosis of Parkinson's disease or parkinsonism (also referred to as hypokinetic rigidity syndrome)
- Schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder
- Patients in whom CAM-ICU cannot be performed to screen for delirium (i.e., acute encephalopathy, mental retardation, vegetative state/coma, deaf, blind, etc.)
- Inability to speak or understand English
- Expected to die or transfer out of the ICU within 24 hours
- Currently enrolled and participating in another interventional study
- No signed written informed consent by patient or their surrogate decision maker.
Sites / Locations
- Keck Hospital of the University of Southern California
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Active Comparator
Experimental
Placebo Comparator
Quetiapine
Trazodone
Placebo
Start study medication at 25 mg daily PO ; may increase to BID or TID if RASS>=2 or rescue medication must be given; thereafter, if med is TID, dose can be increased by increment of 50 mg q12 hr if RASS>=2 and/or >1 dose of rescue medication is given within 24 hours [max dose 200 mg/day] dose can be reduced/discontinued per discretion of ICU attending if delirium improving, patient experiences AE likely related to study drug, after 14 days of treatment, or patient is discharged from ICU dose should be held if RASS is -3 to -5/comatose/unresponsive or sudden acute change in mental status
Start study medication at 25 mg daily PO ; may increase to BID or TID if RASS>=2 or rescue medication must be given; thereafter, if med is TID, dose can be increased by increment of 50 mg q12 hr if RASS>=2 and/or >1 dose of rescue medication is given within 24 hours [max dose 200 mg/day] dose can be reduced/discontinued per discretion of ICU attending if delirium improving, patient experiences AE likely related to study drug, after 14 days of treatment, or patient is discharged from ICU dose should be held if RASS is -3 to -5/comatose/unresponsive or sudden acute change in mental status
Start study medication at 25 mg daily PO ; may increase to BID or TID if RASS>=2 or rescue medication must be given; thereafter, if med is TID, dose can be increased by increment of 50 mg q12 hr if RASS>=2 and/or >1 dose of rescue medication is given within 24 hours [max dose 200 mg/day] dose can be reduced/discontinued per discretion of ICU attending if delirium improving, patient experiences AE likely related to study drug, after 14 days of treatment, or patient is discharged from ICU dose should be held if RASS is -3 to -5/comatose/unresponsive or sudden acute change in mental status