Study of an Electronic Health Record-embedded Severe Sepsis Early Warning Alert
NCT ID: NCT02376842
Last Updated: 2015-11-17
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
1149 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2014-11-30
2015-03-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Electronic early warning systems and predictive analytic tools lack rigorous evaluation and standardization. There are literature demonstrating unintended consequences and even harms from the implementation of electronic health records and clinical decision support tools. As such, this is a situation of clinical equipoise in which it is unclear whether this quality improvement initiative will benefit patient care or not. To evaluate this question, the severe sepsis BPA will be initiated in a randomized fashion with each patient randomly assigned to either potentially generate this alert as described above or to generate this alert silently such that only quality improvement staff will be aware that criteria have been met via the EHR.
This is a randomized, single-blind prospective quality improvement study. Patients will be randomized by encounter to have the BPA visible or invisible during hospital admission. If visible, the alert will display to the primary nurse and physician and send a page to a crisis nurse when BPA criteria are met. If invisible, the alert will be triggered but will be invisible to the care team (only visible to quality improvement staff via the EHR)
* Inclusion criteria
o Admitted to Stanford Hospital (inpatient or observation status) to any medical or surgical service for at least 24 hours during the period of the study
* Exclusion criteria
o Admitted to an intensive-care level service (MICU, SICU, CVICU, CCU)
* While ideally we will make this available to ICU patients, the alert is likely to be far less specific in ICU patients and less clinically useful given the high level of care (eg 1:1 nursing and hourly vital signs).
o Patient code status is DNR/C (comfort care only)
* These patients would not be appropriate to treat with antibiotics and aggressive care generally give the comfort care goals of care.
o Emergency Department patients (may be included in the near future)
* Primary endpoints
o Percentage of patients receiving antibiotics within three hours
* Secondary endpoints
* Percentage of patients with hypotension or lactate \>= 4 who received at least 30 ml/kg fluid
* Rate of 3 hour sepsis bundle completion (serum lactate, blood cultures, antibiotics)
* Length of hospital stay
* Cost of hospital stay per day and overall cost
* Mortality at hospital discharge
* Sample size and duration
* Based on prior studies, we predict a 10-15% difference in one or more primary endpoints (see Sawyer et. Al, Crit Care Med. 2011 March, 39:469)
* We therefore anticipate enrolling 1500 patients, an estimated 150 of whom will have true sepsis, over approximately six months, to achieve 80% power.
* Analysis will compare endpoints among all patients in the treatment and control groups
* Early stopping will be decided by an oversight committee which will review data at 3 months. If there is statistically significant different of more than 10% between groups, the study will be terminated early and in discussion with hospital quality and safety committee, use whichever strategy is superior for all patients in the hospital.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Severe sepsis early warning best practice alert
Patients in this arm will actively generate the alert.
Severe sepsis early warning best practice alert
Standard care
This arm will be the current standard of care and will not generate the alert.
Standard care
Interventions
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Severe sepsis early warning best practice alert
Standard care
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
* Patient code status is DNR/C (comfort care only)
* Patients less than 18 years of age at time of admission.
* Emergency Department patients (may be included in the near future)
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Stanford University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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N. Lance Downing, MD
Principle Investigator
Locations
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Stanford Hospital
Stanford, California, United States
Countries
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References
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Westphal GA, Koenig A, Caldeira Filho M, Feijo J, de Oliveira LT, Nunes F, Fujiwara K, Martins SF, Roman Goncalves AR. Reduced mortality after the implementation of a protocol for the early detection of severe sepsis. J Crit Care. 2011 Feb;26(1):76-81. doi: 10.1016/j.jcrc.2010.08.001. Epub 2010 Oct 30.
Nelson JL, Smith BL, Jared JD, Younger JG. Prospective trial of real-time electronic surveillance to expedite early care of severe sepsis. Ann Emerg Med. 2011 May;57(5):500-4. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2010.12.008. Epub 2011 Jan 12.
Brandt BN, Gartner AB, Moncure M, Cannon CM, Carlton E, Cleek C, Wittkopp C, Simpson SQ. Identifying severe sepsis via electronic surveillance. Am J Med Qual. 2015 Nov-Dec;30(6):559-65. doi: 10.1177/1062860614541291. Epub 2014 Jun 26.
Other Identifiers
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3675309
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id