RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT06757543

A Stepped Wedge Cluster Randomised Trial of Video Versus Direct Laryngoscopy for Intubation of Newborn Infants


Sponsor

University College Dublin

Enrollment

840 participants

Start Date

Jan 13, 2025

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Many newborn babies have difficulty breathing. When babies need a lot of help, a doctor will intubate them - i.e. put a tube into their windpipe (trachea) - so that they can be given support with a breathing machine. Intubation is a difficult procedure, during which many babies have falls in their blood oxygen levels and heart rate. When doctors intubate babies, they use a device called a laryngoscope to identify the entrance to the windpipe. A standard laryngoscope has a light at its tip. When doctors use this device, they insert it into the baby's mouth and then look directly into the mouth to find the entrance (direct laryngoscopy). Less than half of first attempts to insert a tube are successful using this device. More recently, video laryngoscopes have been developed. These devices also have a camera at the tip and display a magnified view of the entrance to the windpipe on a screen. A study at one hospital showed that the doctors there inserted the tube at the first attempt more often when they used a video laryngoscope instead of a standard laryngoscope. This study was not large enough to see whether fewer babies had low oxygen levels or heart rate during the procedure. The goal of this clinical trial is to see whether more newborn babies are intubated at the first attempt without falls in their blood oxygen levels or heart rate when the doctors use video laryngoscopy compared to direct laryngoscopy. Hospitals where doctors routinely intubate babies by looking directly into the mouth will take part in the NEU-VODE study. From the start of the study, the doctors at each hospital will continue with their usual approach to intubation and collect information about intubation attempts. As the study progresses, the doctors at each participating hospital will switch one--by-one to routinely attempting intubation with a video laryngoscope. The date on which they switch will be determined by chance. By the end of the study, each hospital will have had a study period where babies were routinely intubated using direct laryngoscopy and video laryngoscopy. At the end of the study, the information collected from all the babies intubated during the study will be compared to see if more babies were successfully intubated at the first attempt without falls in their blood oxygen levels or heart rate in the video laryngoscopy group.


Eligibility

Min Age: 0 MinutesMax Age: 1 Month

Inclusion Criteria1

  • Infants of any gestational age in whom endotracheal intubation is attempted can be included in this study once there is parental consent to the use their infant's data.

Exclusion Criteria1

  • Infants will be excluded if parents do not consent for their infants' data to be used.

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Interventions

DEVICEVideo laryngoscopy

Video laryngoscopy with C-MAC (Karl Storz, Tuttlingen, Germany)

DEVICEDirect laryngoscopy with standard laryngoscope

Direct laryngoscopy with standard laryngoscope


Locations(18)

Clinical Hospital Centre

Rijeka, Croatia

Clinical Hospital "Holy Spirit"

Zagreb, Croatia

University Hospital Brno

Brno, Czechia

General University Hospital

Prague, Czechia

Institute for Mother and Child Care

Prague, Czechia

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

Thessaloniki, Greece

Second Semmelweiss University

Budapest, Hungary

University of Padova

Padova, Italy

Oslo University Hospital

Oslo, Norway

Medical University of Gdańsk

Gdansk, Poland

Medical University of Silesia

Katowice, Poland

Poznań University of Medical Sciences

Poznan, Poland

Provincial Hospital No. 2

Rzeszów, Poland

Wrocław Medical University

Wroclaw, Poland

Clinical County Emergency Hospital

Sibiu, Romania

George Emil Palade University

Tărgu Mures, Romania

University and Polytechnic Hospital La Fe

Valencia, Spain

Bukovinian State Medical University

Chernivtsi, Ukraine

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NCT06757543


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