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Conservative versus liberal oxygenation targets in critically ill children: the randomised multiple-centre pilot Oxy-PICU trial

Conservative versus liberal oxygenation targets in critically ill children: the randomised multiple-centre pilot Oxy-PICU trial
Conservative versus liberal oxygenation targets in critically ill children: the randomised multiple-centre pilot Oxy-PICU trial

Background: Oxygen saturation monitoring for children receiving respiratory support is standard worldwide. No randomised clinical trials have compared peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) targets for critically ill children. The harm of interventions to raise SpO2 to > 94% may exceed their benefits. Methods: We undertook an open, parallel-group randomised trial of children > 38 weeks completed gestation and < 16 years of age receiving invasive or non-invasive respiratory support and supplemental oxygen who were admitted urgently to one of three paediatric intensive care units. A ‘research without prior consent’ approach was employed. Children were randomly assigned to a liberal oxygenation group (SpO2 targets > 94%) or a conservative oxygenation group (SpO2 = 88–92% inclusive). Outcomes were measures of feasibility: recruitment rate, protocol adherence and acceptability, between-group separation of SpO2 and safety. The Oxy-PICU trial was registered before recruitment: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT03040570. Results: A total of 159 children met the inclusion criteria, of whom 119 (75%) were randomised between April and July 2017, representing a rate of 10 patients per month per site. The mean time to randomisation from first contact with an intensive care team was 1.9 (SD 2.2) h. Consent to continue in the study was obtained in 107 cases (90%); the children’s parents/legal representatives were supportive of the consent process. The median (interquartile range, IQR) of time-weighted individual mean SpO2 was 94.9% (92.6–97.1) in the conservative oxygenation group and 97.5% (96.2–98.4) in the liberal group [difference 2.7%, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.3–4.0%, p < 0.001]. Median (IQR) time-weighted individual mean FiO2 was 0.28 (0.24–0.37) in the conservative group and 0.37 (0.30–0.42) in the liberal group (difference 0.08, 95% CI 0.03–0.13, p < 0.001). There were no significant between-group differences in length of stay, duration of organ support or mortality. Two prespecified serious adverse events (cardiac arrests) occurred, both in the liberal oxygenation group. Conclusion: A definitive clinical trial of peripheral oxygen saturation targets is feasible in critically ill children.

Clinical trial, Oxygenation, PICU respiratory failure
0342-4642
1240–1248
Peters, Mark J.
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Jones, Gareth A.L.
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Wiley, Daisy
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Wulff, Jerome
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Ramnarayan, Padmanabhan
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Ray, Samiran
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Inwald, David
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Grocott, Michael
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Griksaitis, Michael
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Pappachan, John
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O’Neill, Lauran
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Eaton, Simon
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Mouncey, Paul R.
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Harrison, David A.
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Rowan, Kathryn M.
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The Oxy-PICU Investigators for the Paediatric Intensive Care Society Study Group (PICS-SG)
Peters, Mark J.
a1db2568-cc2a-4672-8765-6340ee2d4972
Jones, Gareth A.L.
00e46641-fa1a-40d8-bb24-eb723167e3d8
Wiley, Daisy
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Wulff, Jerome
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Ramnarayan, Padmanabhan
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Ray, Samiran
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Inwald, David
c8fca43c-ff9f-43c7-9d4c-dfb8afd946f0
Grocott, Michael
1e87b741-513e-4a22-be13-0f7bb344e8c2
Griksaitis, Michael
b5ffabf6-719c-4d1c-8b52-04962fc245f9
Pappachan, John
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O’Neill, Lauran
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Eaton, Simon
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Mouncey, Paul R.
e06f2505-6ccf-4b32-8432-0223c07a2f0e
Harrison, David A.
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Rowan, Kathryn M.
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Peters, Mark J., Jones, Gareth A.L., Wiley, Daisy, Wulff, Jerome, Ramnarayan, Padmanabhan, Ray, Samiran, Inwald, David, Grocott, Michael, Griksaitis, Michael, Pappachan, John, O’Neill, Lauran, Eaton, Simon, Mouncey, Paul R., Harrison, David A. and Rowan, Kathryn M. , The Oxy-PICU Investigators for the Paediatric Intensive Care Society Study Group (PICS-SG) (2018) Conservative versus liberal oxygenation targets in critically ill children: the randomised multiple-centre pilot Oxy-PICU trial. Intensive Care Medicine, 44 (8), 1240–1248. (doi:10.1007/s00134-018-5232-7).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Oxygen saturation monitoring for children receiving respiratory support is standard worldwide. No randomised clinical trials have compared peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) targets for critically ill children. The harm of interventions to raise SpO2 to > 94% may exceed their benefits. Methods: We undertook an open, parallel-group randomised trial of children > 38 weeks completed gestation and < 16 years of age receiving invasive or non-invasive respiratory support and supplemental oxygen who were admitted urgently to one of three paediatric intensive care units. A ‘research without prior consent’ approach was employed. Children were randomly assigned to a liberal oxygenation group (SpO2 targets > 94%) or a conservative oxygenation group (SpO2 = 88–92% inclusive). Outcomes were measures of feasibility: recruitment rate, protocol adherence and acceptability, between-group separation of SpO2 and safety. The Oxy-PICU trial was registered before recruitment: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT03040570. Results: A total of 159 children met the inclusion criteria, of whom 119 (75%) were randomised between April and July 2017, representing a rate of 10 patients per month per site. The mean time to randomisation from first contact with an intensive care team was 1.9 (SD 2.2) h. Consent to continue in the study was obtained in 107 cases (90%); the children’s parents/legal representatives were supportive of the consent process. The median (interquartile range, IQR) of time-weighted individual mean SpO2 was 94.9% (92.6–97.1) in the conservative oxygenation group and 97.5% (96.2–98.4) in the liberal group [difference 2.7%, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.3–4.0%, p < 0.001]. Median (IQR) time-weighted individual mean FiO2 was 0.28 (0.24–0.37) in the conservative group and 0.37 (0.30–0.42) in the liberal group (difference 0.08, 95% CI 0.03–0.13, p < 0.001). There were no significant between-group differences in length of stay, duration of organ support or mortality. Two prespecified serious adverse events (cardiac arrests) occurred, both in the liberal oxygenation group. Conclusion: A definitive clinical trial of peripheral oxygen saturation targets is feasible in critically ill children.

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Peters Oxy-PICU Final accepted_version - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 May 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 June 2018
Published date: August 2018
Keywords: Clinical trial, Oxygenation, PICU respiratory failure

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 424846
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/424846
ISSN: 0342-4642
PURE UUID: 0362109e-c76b-4124-8be2-805148734566
ORCID for Michael Grocott: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9484-7581

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Date deposited: 05 Oct 2018 11:49
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:00

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Contributors

Author: Mark J. Peters
Author: Gareth A.L. Jones
Author: Daisy Wiley
Author: Jerome Wulff
Author: Padmanabhan Ramnarayan
Author: Samiran Ray
Author: David Inwald
Author: Michael Grocott ORCID iD
Author: Michael Griksaitis
Author: John Pappachan
Author: Lauran O’Neill
Author: Simon Eaton
Author: Paul R. Mouncey
Author: David A. Harrison
Author: Kathryn M. Rowan
Corporate Author: The Oxy-PICU Investigators for the Paediatric Intensive Care Society Study Group (PICS-SG)

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