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Benzodiazepine-free Anesthetic for Reduction of Delirium (B-Free) (B-Free)

Primary Purpose

Post-operative Delirium

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 1
Locations
Canada
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Benzodiazepine - limited use strategy
Benzodiazepine - Ad libitum strategy
Sponsored by
McMaster University
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional prevention trial for Post-operative Delirium

Eligibility Criteria

18 Years - undefined (Adult, Older Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  • All patients undergoing cardiac surgery during the study period at the Hamilton General and St. Boniface General Hospitals.

Exclusion Criteria:

-

Sites / Locations

  • St. Boniface Hospital
  • Dr Summer Syed

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm Type

Experimental

Active Comparator

Arm Label

Benzodiazepine - Limited use strategy

Benzodiazepine - Ad libitum strategy

Arm Description

No routine use of any intraoperative benzodiazepines. Accepted benzodiazepine use in the case of seizure, alcohol withdrawal, or known benzodiazepine dependence. Accepted benzodiazepine use in patients who are hemodynamically unstable and/or have cardiac anatomy that puts them at high risk of developing ischemia on induction of anesthesia.

Administration of some benzodiazepine to most patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Accepted lack of benzodiazepine use in patients who have contraindications to the administration of these medications (e.g. documented allergy).

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) assessment
Completion of a minimum of at least 1 CAM assessment in 95% of patients - Outcome for larger, multi-centre trial
Completion of a minimum of at least 1 CAM assessment per day
Completion of a minimum of at least 1 CAM assessment per day in ICU in 90% of patients, and completion of at least a single CAM assessment in 95% of all patients treated during the study period. Given our sample size of 480 patients, this would constitute completion of a single CAM assessment in 456/480 patients. CAM assessments are completed and documented in the electronic medical record by both ICU and ward nurses a minimum of every 12 hours (and more frequently in patients with delirium) in all cardiac surgery patients as part of routine patient care. - Feasibility outcome of pilot.
Protocol adherence
Protocol compliance by individual practitioners such that 80% of patients are not administered any intraoperative benzodiazepines during the benzodiazepine minimization period, and 80% of patients receive intraoperative benzodiazepines during the ad libitum benzodiazepine period.

Secondary Outcome Measures

Delirium duration
Total number of CAM positive days while in hospital - Outcome for larger, multi-centre trial
Length of stay in the Intensive Care unit (ICU)
Total number of days in the ICU - Outcome for larger, multi-centre trial
Length of stay in Hospital
Total number of days in the hospital - Outcome for larger, multi-centre trial
In hospital mortality
Death in hospital - Outcome for larger, multi-centre trial

Full Information

First Posted
February 13, 2017
Last Updated
October 15, 2018
Sponsor
McMaster University
Collaborators
Hamilton Health Sciences Corporation
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT03053869
Brief Title
Benzodiazepine-free Anesthetic for Reduction of Delirium (B-Free)
Acronym
B-Free
Official Title
Benzodiazepine-free Anesthetic for Reduction of Delirium (B-Free): A Two-centre Pilot Study to Determine the Feasibility of a Multi-centre, Randomized, Cluster Crossover Trial
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
October 2018
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
April 1, 2017 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
September 30, 2018 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
September 30, 2018 (Actual)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Sponsor
Name of the Sponsor
McMaster University
Collaborators
Hamilton Health Sciences Corporation

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
No

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
The purpose of this two-centre pilot research study is to establish the feasibility of conducting a full trial that seeks to determine if a cardiac anesthesia policy that uses alternatives to benzodiazepine medications is better at preventing delirium after cardiac surgery when compared with a cardiac anesthesia policy that uses benzodiazepine medications.
Detailed Description
ICU data suggests that benzodiazepines are linked to delirium, and minimizing their use has been incorporated into ICU practice guidelines. Cardiac surgery patients are at elevated risk of delirium. However, benzodiazepine administration still constitutes a common part of cardiac anesthesia practice, related to the previous absence of alternate medications and techniques to ensure hemodynamic stability and prevent intraoperative awareness. However, with the advent of new medications and processed EEG monitoring, benzodiazepine use is no longer ubiquitous, with both utilization and dose varying among practitioners. These multiple approaches to cardiac anesthesia care are haphazard, which speaks to the clinical equipoise between them. As such, the investigators have decided to standardize our approach to cardiac anesthesia care, and to evaluate the impact of changes in approach on postoperative delirium, a serious problem for both individual patients and health care systems. Studying strategies of care and their impact on delirium: There is a great need to understand if a strategy of limitation of intraoperative benzodiazepine use during cardiac surgery can reduce postoperative delirium. Cardiac surgery is done in specialized institutions performing high volumes of surgery in order to reduce complications, increase efficiency, and obtain superior outcomes. The surgical care of patients in these high volume cardiac surgery centres is undertaken using standardized procedures that optimize outcomes. The investigators would like to determine if a policy limiting the use of intra-operative benzodiazepine will reduce postoperative delirium, a question which is asked from the perspective of clinical effectiveness. The only way to answer this question is to randomize between two institutional approaches to benzodiazepine use: a policy of standard use in all patients compared to a policy of limited benzodiazepine use in select patients only. The cluster randomized trial is a methodologic approach designed to test different institutional policies. In the cluster crossover trial, each institution is randomized to use one policy or the other and then, after a treatment and suitable wash-out period, the institution crosses over to the other policy. This approach is methodologically rigorous and tests the effects of the change in practice as it would actually be used in the clinical setting. Therefore, the optimal approach to answer the question of intraoperative benzodiazepine strategy is a cluster crossover trial, which randomizes cardiac surgery centres to each of two standard approaches to intraoperative benzodiazepine use, with crossover within each site. An institutional policy of limiting intraoperative benzodiazepine use during adult cardiac surgery, compared to a policy of 'ad libitum' intraoperative benzodiazepine use, will reduce the rate of post-operative delirium. Our goal is to undertake a randomized cluster crossover trial, with randomization at the level of the hospital. Before such a trial can be conducted, we need to establish feasibility. We therefore propose to undertake a pilot study at two hospitals, to establish the feasibility of the trial protocol. This pilot trial will be conducted over approximately 6 months, in 4 study periods. Because of variation in the number of procedures performed within a given month, the duration of each period will be determined by the amount of time required to manage 120 patients according to the selected policy. There will be a 1-week washout period between each study period to enable staff transitions between institutional policies of cardiac anesthesia care. At the outset of the study, we will randomize the pilot site to any of 2 possible alternating sequences of benzodiazepine-minimized (A) or routine benzodiazepine administration (B) (i.e. ABAB or BABA). We call this study the B-free Pilot Trial. We will use data from this pilot in the larger study unless substantial protocol modifications are needed. Rationale: At least 1 CAM assessment will be required to assess the primary outcome of the large trial, with one CAM per ICU ideal to assess delirium (as it has a fluctuating course). Protocol compliance by individual practitioners such that 80% of patients are not administered any intraoperative benzodiazepines during the benzodiazepine minimization period, and 80% of patients receive intraoperative benzodiazepines during the ad libitum benzodiazepine period. This corresponds to 192/240 patients treated per protocol within each treatment arm. Rationale: In this trial we are comparing two different institutional policies. However, in reality, anesthesiologists are individuals who may make individual patient management decisions. In addition, there are concrete reasons why some patients should not be treated according to one or the other policy. We will thus use the pilot study to evaluate the proportion of patients managed according to the policy being used during a given crossover period in order to be certain that, in the large trial, there will be significant differences in benzodiazepine administration between the two periods. Incidence of intraoperative awareness of no more than 2% during the benzodiazepine minimization period (i.e. 5/240 patients) at one of the two pilot sites (HGH). This is defined as the recall of intraoperative events, and will be ascertained through the use of a standardized questionnaire widely used in research and clinical practice to ascertain patient awareness (see Appendix I: Procedure for Assessment of Intraoperative Awareness). Rationale: There is a historical belief that benzodiazepines decrease the risk of intraoperative awareness, even though there is no evidence to support this belief.2,4,5 Given that (1) there is no evidence to support the preventative effect of benzodiazepines on intraoperative awareness and (2) the assessment of awareness is not a routine part of clinical practice in all sites in Canada, we would like to establish a rate of intraoperative awareness in patients treated during the benzodiazepine minimization period that is not higher than upper boundary of the 95th percent confidence interval for the pooled incidence reported in three large, recent studies (i.e. 2%). Achievement of this objective during the pilot study will justify not formally assessing for intraoperative awareness at all sites during the multi-centre trial. Relationship between the incidence of postoperative delirium in hospital-collected, administrative data and Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI) data of ≥ 85%. This will be defined as the incidence of postoperative delirium in the CIHI discharge abstracts database divided by the incidence of postoperative delirium reported in hospital administrative data. Rationale: We believe that the incidence of postoperative delirium is most reliably and accurately recorded in hospital-collected administrative data, using the CAM. However, collecting the outcome of delirium using this data source will be more work-intensive and costly than collecting the outcome of delirium using the CIHI discharge abstracts database, which we believe will underrepresent the true incidence of postoperative delirium. As such, we will collect data from both of these sources during the pilot trial. If the reported incidence of postoperative delirium in the CIHI discharge abstract database is at least 85% of that reported in hospital administrative data, we will use this as the primary data source in the large trial (and will modify the secondary outcomes of duration of delirium, ICU LOS, and hospital LOS to ensure they reflect data fields collected by CIHI). If this threshold is not exceeded, we will obtain the extra funding and human resources required for local data collection in the large trial.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Post-operative Delirium

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Prevention
Study Phase
Phase 1
Interventional Study Model
Crossover Assignment
Masking
None (Open Label)
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
480 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Benzodiazepine - Limited use strategy
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
No routine use of any intraoperative benzodiazepines. Accepted benzodiazepine use in the case of seizure, alcohol withdrawal, or known benzodiazepine dependence. Accepted benzodiazepine use in patients who are hemodynamically unstable and/or have cardiac anatomy that puts them at high risk of developing ischemia on induction of anesthesia.
Arm Title
Benzodiazepine - Ad libitum strategy
Arm Type
Active Comparator
Arm Description
Administration of some benzodiazepine to most patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Accepted lack of benzodiazepine use in patients who have contraindications to the administration of these medications (e.g. documented allergy).
Intervention Type
Drug
Intervention Name(s)
Benzodiazepine - limited use strategy
Other Intervention Name(s)
Xanax, Valium, Ativan
Intervention Description
No routine use of any intraoperative benzodiazepines. Accepted benzodiazepine use in the case of seizure, alcohol withdrawal, or known benzodiazepine dependence. Accepted benzodiazepine use in patients who are hemodynamically unstable and/or have cardiac anatomy that puts them at high risk of developing ischemia on induction of anesthesia.
Intervention Type
Drug
Intervention Name(s)
Benzodiazepine - Ad libitum strategy
Other Intervention Name(s)
Xanax, Valium, Ativan
Intervention Description
Administration of some benzodiazepine to most patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Accepted lack of benzodiazepine use in patients who have contraindications to the administration of these medications (e.g. documented allergy).
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) assessment
Description
Completion of a minimum of at least 1 CAM assessment in 95% of patients - Outcome for larger, multi-centre trial
Time Frame
1 day
Title
Completion of a minimum of at least 1 CAM assessment per day
Description
Completion of a minimum of at least 1 CAM assessment per day in ICU in 90% of patients, and completion of at least a single CAM assessment in 95% of all patients treated during the study period. Given our sample size of 480 patients, this would constitute completion of a single CAM assessment in 456/480 patients. CAM assessments are completed and documented in the electronic medical record by both ICU and ward nurses a minimum of every 12 hours (and more frequently in patients with delirium) in all cardiac surgery patients as part of routine patient care. - Feasibility outcome of pilot.
Time Frame
1 day
Title
Protocol adherence
Description
Protocol compliance by individual practitioners such that 80% of patients are not administered any intraoperative benzodiazepines during the benzodiazepine minimization period, and 80% of patients receive intraoperative benzodiazepines during the ad libitum benzodiazepine period.
Time Frame
4-week crossover period
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Delirium duration
Description
Total number of CAM positive days while in hospital - Outcome for larger, multi-centre trial
Time Frame
5-7 days
Title
Length of stay in the Intensive Care unit (ICU)
Description
Total number of days in the ICU - Outcome for larger, multi-centre trial
Time Frame
1-3 days
Title
Length of stay in Hospital
Description
Total number of days in the hospital - Outcome for larger, multi-centre trial
Time Frame
5-14 days
Title
In hospital mortality
Description
Death in hospital - Outcome for larger, multi-centre trial
Time Frame
1-14 days

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
18 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: All patients undergoing cardiac surgery during the study period at the Hamilton General and St. Boniface General Hospitals. Exclusion Criteria: -
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Summer Syed, MD
Organizational Affiliation
McMaster University/Hamilton Health Sciences Corp.
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
St. Boniface Hospital
City
Winnipeg
State/Province
Manitoba
Country
Canada
Facility Name
Dr Summer Syed
City
Hamilton
State/Province
Ontario
ZIP/Postal Code
L8L 2X2
Country
Canada

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Plan to Share IPD
Undecided
Citations:
PubMed Identifier
23992774
Citation
Inouye SK, Westendorp RG, Saczynski JS. Delirium in elderly people. Lancet. 2014 Mar 8;383(9920):911-22. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(13)60688-1. Epub 2013 Aug 28.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
7966844
Citation
Marcantonio ER, Juarez G, Goldman L, Mangione CM, Ludwig LE, Lind L, Katz N, Cook EF, Orav EJ, Lee TH. The relationship of postoperative delirium with psychoactive medications. JAMA. 1994 Nov 16;272(19):1518-22.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
26352694
Citation
Gleason LJ, Schmitt EM, Kosar CM, Tabloski P, Saczynski JS, Robinson T, Cooper Z, Rogers SO Jr, Jones RN, Marcantonio ER, Inouye SK. Effect of Delirium and Other Major Complications on Outcomes After Elective Surgery in Older Adults. JAMA Surg. 2015 Dec;150(12):1134-40. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2015.2606.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
32416996
Citation
Spence J, Belley-Cote E, Jacobsohn E, Lee SF, Whitlock R, Bangdiwala S, Syed S, Sarkaria A, MacIsaac S, Lengyel A, Long S, Um K, McIntyre WF, Kavosh M, Fast I, Arora R, Lamy A, Connolly S, Devereaux PJ. Restricted versus liberal intraoperative benzodiazepine use in cardiac anaesthesia for reducing delirium (B-Free Pilot): a pilot, multicentre, randomised, cluster crossover trial. Br J Anaesth. 2020 Jul;125(1):38-46. doi: 10.1016/j.bja.2020.03.030. Epub 2020 May 13.
Results Reference
derived
PubMed Identifier
29671186
Citation
Spence J, Belley-Cote E, Lee SF, Bangdiwala S, Whitlock R, LeManach Y, Syed S, Lamy A, Jacobsohn E, MacIsaac S, Devereaux PJ, Connolly S. The role of randomized cluster crossover trials for comparative effectiveness testing in anesthesia: design of the Benzodiazepine-Free Cardiac Anesthesia for Reduction in Postoperative Delirium (B-Free) trial. Can J Anaesth. 2018 Jul;65(7):813-821. doi: 10.1007/s12630-018-1130-2. Epub 2018 Apr 18.
Results Reference
derived

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Benzodiazepine-free Anesthetic for Reduction of Delirium (B-Free)

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