Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE3
599 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-07-01
2024-06-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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The basic elements of the ENRICH-US intervention are very similar to the elements of most adult ERPs and include perioperative counseling and education, mindfulness training, maintenance of euvolumia through limited perioperative fasting and limited intraoperative fluid resuscitation, early enteral intake, early mobilization, limited opioid use, and non-routine use of surgical drains and tubes. Elements span the preadmission and pre-, intra-, and post-operative phases of care. The concurrent use of these integrative healthcare interventions results in a markedly improved patient care experience that minimizes the physiologic stress of surgery and hastens recovery. These ERPs have been found to decrease hospital length of stay, in-hospital costs, complications, and help patients recover sooner after surgery. Though each ERP element is independently simple, implementation of the combined elements likely will require substantial redesign of the systems and processes of care to assure a high level of coordination among surgery, anesthesia, and nursing clinicians.
This prospective study involves multiple sites and uses a stepped-wedge, cluster-randomized, controlled study design of the ENRICH protocol in pediatric patients undergoing elective GI surgery. The cluster-randomized trial design is ideally suited for pragmatic intervention implementation. A hybrid, type 2 study design will be used with equal focus on evaluating the effectiveness and the implementation. The study will optimize implementation using the National Implementation Research Network's five Active Implementation Frameworks (AIFs), which identify competency, organization, and leadership as drivers of implementation and empower team collaboration and facilitate rapid-cycle evaluation. The five AIFs used as key tools to achieve high-fidelity and sustainable implementation will include patient-stakeholder input in all steps of the improvement process and a Learning Collaborative (LC) with rapid-cycle data feedback.
The study, by taking place in the setting where patients receive usual clinical care by usual clinicians, using data primarily from existing data sources (e.g., EHR), having minimal eligibility criteria, and recruiting all eligible pediatric patients undergoing GI surgery delivery, fulfills most of the pragmatic qualities to understand the real-world performance and implications of the intervention. The nature of this trial does not allow for subjects (patients or clinicians) to be blinded.
The study will enroll patients at 18 US hospitals ("sites") that participate in the Pediatric Surgery Research Collaborative (PedSRC), a cooperative group of pediatric surgeons and researchers committed to performing clinical research in pediatric surgery. All sites offer comprehensive, inpatient, pediatric services, including surgical services. The PedSRC represents one of the largest pediatric surgical networks for collaboration and research.
The 18 sites will be randomly assigned to one of three clusters for the stepped wedge design with each cluster, in turn, being randomly assigned to an intervention start period. Given that many sites have already initiated some ERP elements, a study design that randomizes sites or patients to a control arm without any ERP elements is not feasible. The stepped-wedge design was selected, in part, to ease the practical challenges of concurrently coordinating training and data collection across the 18 sites.
The ENRICH-US study provides a unique opportunity to accelerate, yet evaluate the adoption of ERP elements for pediatric GI patients, thus improving surgical care for this high-risk population by rapidly incorporating ERPs into practice, using the five AIFs. This study will serve as a model for future pediatric surgical quality improvement implementation efforts.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
SEQUENTIAL
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
NONE
Study Groups
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ENRICH-US Implementation- early
Baseline, pre-intervention data will be collected. This phase consists primarily of individual-level patient (ages 10-18 years undergoing elective GI surgery) data collection. This phase involves abstraction of existing electronic health records data by the Site Coordinator about current, standard perioperative care received by patients. Patients and parents will complete web-based HRQoL assessments preoperatively, and 5 days and 4-6 weeks post-operatively. Site-specific barriers and facilitators to implementation will be assessed by semi-structured, telephone interviews, conducted by each Site's PI and Coordinator.
Intervention phase will span 12 months with an implementation curriculum. Sites will be randomized to this implementation phase based on stepped-wedge cluster assignment. A sustainability phase will collect post intervention data.
Perioperative surgical care
The ENRICH-US Protocol includes perioperative counseling and education, maintaining euvolumia through limited perioperative fasting and limited intraoperative fluid resuscitation, early enteral intake and mobilization, limited use of opioids, and non-routine use of surgical drains and tubes. Elements span the pre-, intra-, and post-operative experience for patients and involve care coordination among surgery, anesthesia, and nursing providers. Though individually simple, the concomitant implementation of the combined elements results in a markedly improved patient care experience that mitigates the physiologic stress of surgery and hastens recovery.
ENRICH-US Implementation- mid
Baseline, pre-intervention data will be collected. This phase consists primarily of individual-level patient (ages 10-18 years undergoing elective GI surgery) data collection. This phase involves abstraction of existing electronic health records data by the Site Coordinator about current, standard perioperative care received by patients. Patients and parents will complete web-based HRQoL assessments preoperatively, and 5 days and 4-6 weeks post-operatively. Site-specific barriers and facilitators to implementation will be assessed by semi-structured, telephone interviews, conducted by each Site's PI and Coordinator.
Intervention phase will span 12 months with an implementation curriculum. Sites will be randomized to this implementation phase based on stepped-wedge cluster assignment. A sustainability phase will collect post intervention data.
Perioperative surgical care
The ENRICH-US Protocol includes perioperative counseling and education, maintaining euvolumia through limited perioperative fasting and limited intraoperative fluid resuscitation, early enteral intake and mobilization, limited use of opioids, and non-routine use of surgical drains and tubes. Elements span the pre-, intra-, and post-operative experience for patients and involve care coordination among surgery, anesthesia, and nursing providers. Though individually simple, the concomitant implementation of the combined elements results in a markedly improved patient care experience that mitigates the physiologic stress of surgery and hastens recovery.
ENRICH-US Implementation- late
Baseline, pre-intervention data will be collected. This phase consists primarily of individual-level patient (ages 10-18 years undergoing elective GI surgery) data collection. This phase involves abstraction of existing electronic health records data by the Site Coordinator about current, standard perioperative care received by patients. Patients and parents will complete web-based HRQoL assessments preoperatively, and 5 days and 4-6 weeks post-operatively. Site-specific barriers and facilitators to implementation will be assessed by semi-structured, telephone interviews, conducted by each Site's PI and Coordinator.
Intervention phase will span 12 months with an implementation curriculum. Sites will be randomized to this implementation phase based on stepped-wedge cluster assignment. A sustainability phase will collect post intervention data.
Perioperative surgical care
The ENRICH-US Protocol includes perioperative counseling and education, maintaining euvolumia through limited perioperative fasting and limited intraoperative fluid resuscitation, early enteral intake and mobilization, limited use of opioids, and non-routine use of surgical drains and tubes. Elements span the pre-, intra-, and post-operative experience for patients and involve care coordination among surgery, anesthesia, and nursing providers. Though individually simple, the concomitant implementation of the combined elements results in a markedly improved patient care experience that mitigates the physiologic stress of surgery and hastens recovery.
Interventions
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Perioperative surgical care
The ENRICH-US Protocol includes perioperative counseling and education, maintaining euvolumia through limited perioperative fasting and limited intraoperative fluid resuscitation, early enteral intake and mobilization, limited use of opioids, and non-routine use of surgical drains and tubes. Elements span the pre-, intra-, and post-operative experience for patients and involve care coordination among surgery, anesthesia, and nursing providers. Though individually simple, the concomitant implementation of the combined elements results in a markedly improved patient care experience that mitigates the physiologic stress of surgery and hastens recovery.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Undergoing elective (non-emergency) gastrointestinal/colorectal surgical procedures
Exclusion Criteria
* Patients/families who cannot read and write English or Spanish
10 Years
18 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
NIH
Northwestern University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Mehul Raval
Associate Professor of Surgery and Pediatrics
Locations
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Northwestern University
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Countries
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References
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Balbale SN, Schafer WLA, Davis TL, Blake SC, Close S, Sullivan GA, Reiter AJ, Hu AJ, Smith CJ, Wilberding MJ, Johnson JK, Holl JL, Raval MV. A mixed-method approach to generate and deliver rapid-cycle evaluation feedback: lessons learned from a multicenter implementation trial in pediatric surgery. Implement Sci Commun. 2023 Jul 18;4(1):82. doi: 10.1186/s43058-023-00463-x.
Raval MV, Wymore E, Ingram ME, Tian Y, Johnson JK, Holl JL. Assessing effectiveness and implementation of a perioperative enhanced recovery protocol for children undergoing surgery: study protocol for a prospective, stepped-wedge, cluster, randomized, controlled clinical trial. Trials. 2020 Nov 16;21(1):926. doi: 10.1186/s13063-020-04851-9.
Other Identifiers
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Pro00039201
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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