Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Active, not recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
1200

Summary

Conditions
Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentMasking: Triple (Participant, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)Masking Description: The clinical team responsible for the participant (physicians, nurses and others) and involved with direct patient care will not be blinded to allocation group due to the inherent difficulty in blinding the intervention and as temperature is a vital sign required for clinical care. Measures will be taken to ensure that the information about allocation will not disseminate beyond the immediate group of caregivers responsible for patient care. A blinded physician will evaluate the patient at 96 hours after randomisation and make a statement on neurological prognosis.Primary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

The TTM2 trial is a continuation of the collaboration that resulted in the previous Targeted Temperature Management after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest trial (hereafter: TTM1). With its planned size with it will supersede the TTM1 trial as the largest trial on temperature management as a post-cardi...

The TTM2 trial is a continuation of the collaboration that resulted in the previous Targeted Temperature Management after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest trial (hereafter: TTM1). With its planned size with it will supersede the TTM1 trial as the largest trial on temperature management as a post-cardiac arrest treatment. The TTM1 trial (NCT01020916) was a multicenter, multinational, outcome assessor-blinded, parallel group, randomised clinical trial comparing two strict target temperature regimens of 33°C and 36°C in adult patients, who have sustained return of spontaneous circulation and are unconscious after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, when admitted to hospital. The trial did not demonstrate any difference in survival until end of trial (Hazard Ratio with a point estimate in favour of 36°C of 1.06 (95% confidence interval 0.89-1.28; P=0.51) or neurologic function at six months after the arrest, measured with CPC and mRS. The planned study is a international, multicenter, parallel group, non-commerical, randomized, superiority trial in which a target temperature om 33°C after cardiac arrest will be compared to normothermia and early treatment of fever. Patients eligible for inclusion will be unconscious adult patients with OHCA of a presumed cardiac cause with stable return of spontaneous circulation. Randomization will be performed by a physician in the emergency department, in the angiography suite or in the intensive care unit via web-based application using permuted blocks with varying sizes, stratified by site. Due to the nature of the intervention, health care staff will not be blinded to the intervention. However, the physicians who will assess outcomes will be blinded to temperature allocation, as will those who perform prognostication. The intervention period will commence at the time of randomization. Cooling in the hypothermia group will achieved by means of cold fluids and state-of-the-art cooling devices (intravascular or body-surface applied closed loop systems). The initial aim will be to achieve a body temperature of 33.0°C. When this has been achieved, the target temperature will be 33°C until 28 hours after randomisation. When 28 hours have passed, gradual rewarming at a rate of 1/3°C per hour will commence, this will allow 12 hours for rewarming. In the normothermia arm the aim will be to avoid a temperature greater than or equal to 37.8°C using conservative measures. If a single temperature of 37.8° or greater is measured, active cooling with a device should be initiated and maintained until 40 hours after randomization. All participants will be sedated, mechanically ventilated and hemodynamically supported throughout the intervention period of 40 hours. Participants in both arms who remain comatose after 40h should be kept at a normothermic level (36.5 - 37.7°C) until 72h after randomization and active warming should be avoided. Participants who remain unconscious four days after randomization will be assessed according to a conservative protocol based on the European Resuscitation Council's recommendations for withdrawal of life sustaining therapies. Follow up will be performed at: 1 month (face-to-face or telephone), Assessment according to the modified Rankin scale (mRS) 6 moths (face-to-face), Assessment according to the mRS-scale. Assessment of health-related quality of life using EQ5D-5L.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT02908308
Collaborators
  • Lund University
  • Region Skåne - Skånevård SUND
  • Copenhagen Trial Unit, Center for Clinical Intervention Research
  • Clinical Trials Sweden, Forum South
  • Integrated Biobank of Luxembourg
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Niklas Nielsen, MD, PhD Helsingborgs lasarett, Region Skåne, Sweden Principal Investigator: Hans Friberg, MD, PhD Lund University Hospital, Lund, Sweden Principal Investigator: Tobias Cronberg, MD, PhD Lund University Hospital, Lund, Sweden Principal Investigator: Jan Hovdenes, MD, PhD Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway Principal Investigator: Matt P Wise, MD, PhD University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff, UK Principal Investigator: Clifton W Callaway, MD, PhD University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, USA Principal Investigator: Christian Storm, MD, PhD Charité University Medicine, Berlin, Germany Principal Investigator: Alain Cariou, MD, PhD Université Paris Descartes, France Principal Investigator: David Erlinge, MD, PhD Lund University Hospital, Lund, Sweden Principal Investigator: Christian Rylander, MD, PhD Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Gothenburg, Sweden Principal Investigator: Josef Dankiewicz, MD, PhD Skåne University Hospital Lund Principal Investigator: Mauro Oddo, MD, PhD Université de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland Principal Investigator: Manoj Saxena, MD, PhD The George Institute for Global Health (Sydney, Australia) Principal Investigator: Per Nordberg, MD, PhD Södersjukhuset, Stockholm Principal Investigator: Fabio Taccone, MD, PhD Hopital Erasme, Brussles, Belgium Principal Investigator: Paolo Pelosi, MD, PhD San Martino University Hospital, Genoa Principal Investigator: Michael Ioannidis, MD, PhD Innsbruck University Hospital Principal Investigator: Jan Belholavek, MD, PhD Prague University Hospital Principal Investigator: Paul Young, MD Wellington Regional Hospital Principal Investigator: Hans Kirkegaard, MD,PhD Aarhus University Hospital Principal Investigator: Alistair Nichol, MD, PhD Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, St Vincent's University Hospital