Performance Evaluation of Pupillary Reactivity in Monitoring of Brain-damaged Patients in Intensive Care
2 other identifiers
interventional
90
1 country
1
Brief Summary
The pupillary examination is a major component of the clinical examination and monitoring of brain-damaged patients in intensive care. The occurrence of abnormal size or pupillary reactivity is a prognostic factor of poor neurological outcome or an indicator of the neurological status degradation. To date, the monitoring of the pupils is clinical. The subjectivity of this measure and, the lack of reproducibility and definition of the abnormality remain as many obstacles to the development of a monitoring of early neurological deterioration. The recent development in pupillometer electronics allows the assessment of responsiveness to a calibrated light stimulus. It offers a reliable and reproducible measure of the pupil diameter. The pupillometers were funded by the association of " Gueules Cassées ". This study aims to establish a relationship between an abnormal pupillary reactivity detection by the electronic pupillometer and a deterioration in neurological status of the patient brain-damaged in the intensive-care unit (ICU). This is considered clinically relevant and has been defined by a lower Glasgow Coma Score of at least 2 points for 2 hours or involving a therapeutic action. If this relationship is demonstrated, the temporal relationship between data pupillometry and the patient's neurological status remain to be established more precisely. This is particularly relevant in neurosurgical context and aim to define the status of the electronic pupillometer in intensive care but also in emergency rooms services, the neurovascular units or in the pre-hospital care. Therefore the investigators will compare the pupillometry data in two patients groups, defined accordingly to the appearance or absence of neurological aggravation in the first 5 days of treatment in intensive care, time-frame defined as the maximum risk period in patients with brain damage. The primary endpoint is represented by the estimated area under the ROC curve corresponding to the last measure of the change in pupil size before the onset of neurological deterioration and worse for the fifth day for non-aggravated. Thus the investigators propose to conduct a prospective trial, aiming to record the diagnostic value of pupillary reactivity by the electronic pupillometer in the monitoring of the neurological aggravation of brain damaged patient in ICU. The duration of the follow-up for a subject does not exceed 5 days. The statistical analysis requires the recruitment of 90 patients, which sets the length of the inclusions to 14 months.
Trial Health
Trial Health Score
Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach
participants targeted
Target at P50-P75 for not_applicable
Started Feb 2013
1 active site
Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.
Trial Relationships
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Study Timeline
Key milestones and dates
First Submitted
Initial submission to the registry
February 1, 2013
CompletedStudy Start
First participant enrolled
February 1, 2013
CompletedFirst Posted
Study publicly available on registry
February 22, 2013
CompletedPrimary Completion
Last participant's last visit for primary outcome
September 1, 2014
CompletedStudy Completion
Last participant's last visit for all outcomes
November 1, 2014
CompletedSeptember 1, 2014
August 1, 2014
1.6 years
February 1, 2013
August 29, 2014
Conditions
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcomes (1)
electronic pupillometer
pupillary reactivity
14 months
Secondary Outcomes (1)
Glasgow Coma Score
14 months
Study Arms (1)
patient's neurological status
EXPERIMENTALInterventions
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if:
- male or feminine Subjects of 18 or more years old.
- Patients cérébro - hurt presenting disorders(confusions) of the consciousness (Score of Glasgow \< 9) and justifying an hourly pupillary surveillance(supervision) in the middle of neurosurgical resuscitation. (Definition of the Score of Glasgow in appendix)
- acute(sharp) intellectual Aggression bound(connected) to a cranial trauma, a meningeal bleeding by break of anévrysme, a cerebral vascular accident, an intra-cranial expansive process, a post-operative neurosurgical complication, an intra-cranial high blood pressure of medical origin (méningo-encephalitis, hypertensive encephalopathy)
- Admission in resuscitation within first 48 hours of the aggression
You may not qualify if:
- Subject having a direct eye trauma, as well as any history which can affect(allocate) the relevance of the pupillary examination (anophthalmia, cataract(waterfall) opalescente, surgery irienne, blindness, reached(affected) by III prerequisite, that the character of these affections is bilateral or unilateral).
- presenting Subject of the signs of irreversible coma in the admission.
- minor Subject, pregnant or breast-feeding woman, subject deprived of freedom, subject not being affiliated to the national insurance scheme.
Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.
Sponsors & Collaborators
Study Sites (1)
Assistance Publique Hopitaux de Marseille
Marseille, 13354, France
Study Officials
- STUDY DIRECTOR
Michèle DAMON
Assistance Publique Hopitaux De Marseille
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
LIONEL PELLEGRINI
AP HM
Study Design
- Study Type
- interventional
- Phase
- not applicable
- Allocation
- NA
- Masking
- NONE
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Intervention Model
- SINGLE GROUP
- Sponsor Type
- OTHER
- Responsible Party
- SPONSOR
Study Record Dates
First Submitted
February 1, 2013
First Posted
February 22, 2013
Study Start
February 1, 2013
Primary Completion
September 1, 2014
Study Completion
November 1, 2014
Last Updated
September 1, 2014
Record last verified: 2014-08