Strategy to Avoid Excessive Oxygen Using an Autonomous Oxygen Titration Intervention

Purpose

This study is a multicenter randomized controlled trial to determine the effectiveness of a closed loop/autonomous oxygen titration system (O2matic PRO100) to maintain normoxemia (goal range SpO2 90-96%, target 93%) during the first 72 hours of acute injury or illness, compared to standard provider-driven methods (manual titration with SpO2 target of 90-96%).

Conditions

  • Critical Illness
  • Wounds and Injury
  • Disease Attributes
  • Pathologic Processes

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 18 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  • Age 18 years or older - Hospitalized or will be hospitalized from Emergency Department for major trauma, burn, acute care surgery, or acute respiratory illness - Able to be randomized within 24 hours of hospital arrival - Receiving supplemental oxygen 1-10 liters per minute for documented or presumed hypoxemia (must be higher than baseline for those on chronic oxygen therapy) - Signed and dated informed consent from patient or legally authorized representative (LAR)

Exclusion Criteria

  • Anticipated hospital discharge within 24 hours - Imminent plans to discontinue supplemental oxygen - Imminent plans to administer high flow nasal oxygen, non-invasive ventilation, or invasive mechanical ventilation - Clinical team unwilling or unable to follow the prescribed oxygen titration method in either randomized group - Known prisoner - Known pregnancy - Known contraindicated conditions for use of the PRO100 device: carbon monoxide poisoning, incapable of handling airway secretions, increased methemoglobin, cyanide poisoning, cluster headaches, undrained pneumothorax, sickle cell crisis, paraquat poisoning or a history of bleomycin poisoning, patients for whom the SpO2 signal is not stable

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Primary Purpose
Treatment
Masking
None (Open Label)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
No Intervention
Usual Care (Manual Titration)
Patients randomized to the usual care arm will receive usual care, manual oxygen titration, removal of supplemental oxygen, and escalation per hospital protocol, based on the site's usual SpO2 assessments. The SpO2 monitor for the O2matic PRO100 will also be connected to the patient in observation mode for data collection purposes only (not used for titration decisions).
Experimental
Intervention (Automated Titration)
Patients randomized to the intervention arm will receive supplemental oxygen via nasal cannula (recommended up to 6 lpm) or face mask (recommended up to 15 lpm) and will have supplemental oxygen titrated using an autonomous oxygen titration system for the first 72 hours after randomization, or hospital discharge (whichever sooner).
  • Device: Automated Titration (O2matic)
    The patient will receive supplemental oxygen titrated using an autonomous oxygen titration device. The patient will be monitored and vital signs documented by the site's usual SpO2 assessments, but oxygen titration will occur automatically through the O2matic PRO100 device during the intervention period, unless there is a safety concern. The SpO2 range programmed into the PRO100 is 92-94%. The acceptable SpO2 range for the protocol is 90-96%. If a patient requires >15lpm or other signs of advancing respiratory failure, they will be taken off the autonomous oxygen and transitioned to higher flow oxygen devices or mechanical ventilation per usual clinical care. If the patient is not receiving any supplemental oxygen per the autonomous titration, the clinical team may remove the oxygen delivery device from the patient, but the patient should remain connected to the PRO100 for the duration of the intervention period for data collection and to monitor for new supplemental oxygen needs.

Recruiting Locations

Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Nashville, Tennessee 37232

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
University of Colorado, Denver

Study Contact

Erin Anderson
720-999-8760
erin.l.anderson@cuanschutz.edu

Detailed Description

Ensuring adequate oxygenation is a primary goal in surgical and medical patients to treat and prevent morbidity associated with hypoxemia. However, excessive oxygen administration resulting in hyperoxemia is common, leading to unnecessary utilization of supplemental oxygen, which is a particularly limited resource in austere settings. Building on the previous Strategy to Avoid Excessive Oxygen (SAVE-O2) clinical trials1 (Trauma: NCT045349559; Burn: NCT04534972), the investigators seek to determine effective strategies to implement a targeted normoxemia approach to avoid both hyperoxemia and hypoxemia and reduce supplemental oxygen use, using the PRO100 closed loop/autonomous oxygen system. This research is critical for both military and civilian care settings in determining the effectiveness of an autonomous oxygen system to use to 1) reduce harm associated with both hypoxemia and hyperoxemia and 2) reduce excess use of oxygen. Objectives: the investigators propose the following two objectives: Determine the effectiveness of an autonomous oxygen titration system to improve normoxemia and reduce hypoxemia and hyperoxemia in acutely injured and ill patients receiving supplemental oxygen. The investigators will compare patient-hours spent in normoxemia (SpO2 90-96%), hypoxemia (SpO2 <88%), and hyperoxemia (SpO2 >96%) among patients randomized to autonomous vs manual oxygen titration. Determine the impact of an autonomous oxygen titration system on overall utilization of supplemental oxygen. The investigators will compare the total volume of supplemental oxygen administered to patients randomized to autonomous vs manual oxygen titration during the 72-hour intervention period. Hypothesis: The investigators hypothesize that the use of an autonomous oxygen titration system will be more effective at maintaining normoxemia and reducing time spent in hypoxemia/hyperoxemia than standard manual titration in non-mechanically ventilated patients and will reduce the overall use of supplemental oxygen.