SuspendedPhase 2Phase 3ACTRN12615000115538

The Torpido2 Study: Targeted Oxygenation in the Respiratory care of Premature Infants at Delivery: Effects on developmental Outcome


Sponsor

University of Sydney

Enrollment

1,200 participants

Start Date

Jun 18, 2016

Study Type

Interventional

Conditions

Summary

Oxygen is necessary for life, but both too much or too little, can damage eyes, lungs and brain. The preterm infant is unique, while their ability to cope with too much oxygen (oxidative stress) is limited, they also need some oxygen after birth because their lungs are not fully developed. The Torpido2 Study aims to show that preterm infants born at less than 28 completed weeks gestation who have had delivery room resuscitation initiated with 21% (air) followed by lower oxygen targeting until admission to NICU will have improved outcomes when compared with similar infants who have had delivery room resuscitation initiated with 60% oxygen followed by higher oxygen targeting until admission to NICU.


Eligibility

Sex: Both males and femalesMin Age: 23 WeekssMax Age: 28 Weekss

Inclusion Criteria2

  • Birth at 23 weeks to 28 weeks 6 days gestation
  • Signed, written informed consent by parent(s) or legal guardian

Exclusion Criteria3

  • Delivery outside study centre
  • Any major cardiopulmonary abnormalities that could affect oxygenation or congenital malformations that could affect neuro-developmental outcome
  • Anticipated inability to follow-up at 2 years

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Interventions

Randomised infants are placed on the resuscitation bed and initial care is per local protocol. Adequate lung expansion is achieved with CPAP or ventilation. A pulse oximeter sensor is placed on the ri

Randomised infants are placed on the resuscitation bed and initial care is per local protocol. Adequate lung expansion is achieved with CPAP or ventilation. A pulse oximeter sensor is placed on the right wrist and connected to the Masimo pulse oximeter. Initial FiO2 is set to 0.21. Once oximetry readings are established, FiO2 is adjusted every 30 seconds to achieve target SpO2 values of 80% at 5 minutes and 90% at 10 minutes and after. This is a one off intervention that will last about 20-30 minutes (average duration of respiratory care in the delivery room). Infants may be given pure oxygen (FiO2 1.0) if 1. The infant's heart rate falls below 100 bpm despite adequate ventilation, 2. SpO2 is less than 65% at or after 5 minutes, and/or 3. external cardiac massage or resuscitation medications are required at any time. Management after the infant leaves the delivery room will be as per institutional guidelines.


Locations(5)

Royal Hospital for Women - Randwick

NSW, Australia

John Hunter Children's Hospital - New Lambton

NSW, Australia

Nepean Hospital - Kingswood

NSW, Australia

Gold Coast University Hospital - Southport

NSW, Australia

New Zealand

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ACTRN12615000115538


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