Virtual Reality Hypnosis in Total Knee Arthroplasty Under Spinal Anesthesia
NCT ID: NCT05707234
Last Updated: 2024-03-06
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
Get a concise snapshot of the trial, including recruitment status, study phase, enrollment targets, and key timeline milestones.
COMPLETED
PHASE4
60 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2023-02-15
2023-08-03
Brief Summary
Review the sponsor-provided synopsis that highlights what the study is about and why it is being conducted.
Related Clinical Trials
Explore similar clinical trials based on study characteristics and research focus.
Can the Use of Virtual Reality Improve TKA Outcomes
NCT06962046
Virtual Reality for Post Operative Pain Management After Total Knee Arthroplasty
NCT03665233
Impact of Virtual Reality Hypno-sedation on Functional Recovery and Anxiety in Foot Surgery With Regional Anesthesia
NCT05558449
Effect of Intraoperative Virtual Reality on Anxiety and Vital Findings in Patients Total Knee Replacement Surgery
NCT05668143
Effect of Virtual Reality on Patient Outcomes and Satisfaction in Total Knee Replacement
NCT06933732
Detailed Description
Dive into the extended narrative that explains the scientific background, objectives, and procedures in greater depth.
Yet, while spinal anesthesia prevents procedural pain and ensures immobility of the operative territory, the patient is still awake, conscious of all the noises in the operating room, and can have a high level of intraoperative anxiety. Currently, the standard of care to manage procedural anxiety is pharmacological sedation; i.e. the intravenous administration of additional anesthetic agents such as propofol or midazolam. However, pharmacological sedation has considerable undesirable side effects. Hence, risks of intraprocedural adverse events including respiratory depression, hemodynamic perturbations, or paradoxical effects such as hostility, aggression, and psychomotor agitation, are increased. Moreover, it might lead to longer procedure duration or time to discharge, slower recovery, and postoperative delirium or cognitive dysfunction. In addition to these challenges, it becomes clear that procedural sedation directly impacts consumption of drugs such as opioids, triggering the highlighted risk of addiction.
In this context, new international guidelines for risk mitigation in pharmacological sedation have emerged. Both American and European anesthesia societies recommend particular caution in the use of sedative drugs, especially with benzodiazepines and in patients with obesity or obstructive sleep apnea, which are highly comorbid with knee osteoarthritis. However, only providing less, or even no sedatives at all, is not a valuable solution, as it would negatively impact patient comfort and satisfaction and negatively affect clinical workflow. Therefore, alternative, non-pharmacological interventions that would be able to reduce drug requirements and associated risks while ensuring a similar patient experience are being actively sought.
Among those approaches, there is currently a growing interest towards clinical hypnosis, a one-to-one delivered technique inducing "A state of consciousness involving focused attention and reduced peripheral awareness characterized by an enhanced capacity for response to suggestion". The hypnotic state involves the capacities of absorption (tendency to be fully involved in a mental experience), dissociation (a mental separation from the environment), and suggestibility (tendency to comply with hypnotic suggestions). When combined during surgery with conscious IV sedation and local or regional anesthesia, forming the so-called hypnosedation, clinical hypnosis is associated with improved perioperative safety and comfort as well as better clinical outcomes. More precisely, the use of clinical hypnosis during medical procedures has been shown to reduce pain, emotional distress and anxiety while preserving consciousness, spontaneous breathing, reflexes as well as hemodynamic and metabolic changes, to decrease the time spent in the operating room, and to have a beneficial impact on immediate recovery, characterized by reduced fatigue and postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV). Furthermore, this technique allows to significantly reduce the administrated doses of IV sedation and the associated costs. Yet, several obstacles limit the use of hypnosedation as a standard of care in the operating/ procedure room: the need for continuous patient-side presence of trained professionals in the room (and the cost related to the mobilization of these professionals), the small number of cases per day one healthcare provider can handle, patient's language proficiency, as well as the heterogeneity of the responses to the hypnotic suggestions of patients themselves.
To overcome those limitations, Oncomfort has created Digital Sedation™ sessions, classified as Software as a Medical Device (SaMD), allowing to deliver clinical hypnosis - together with additional integrative therapeutic approaches - through virtual reality, a technique called Virtual Reality Hypnosis (VRH). Virtual reality (VR) is "a computer-generated simulation of a lifelike environment that can be interacted with in a seemingly real or physical way by a person, by means of responsive hardware such as a visor with screen or gloves with sensors. In the medical field, VR has been used as a non-pharmacological mean to alleviate pain, anxiety, and general discomfort during uncomfortable procedures. VR is thought to work by distracting patients from uncomfortable procedures: by giving the illusion of really going into the artificial world, VR is able to capture patient's attention away from the real environment. Accordingly, VR could strengthen the level of absorption and dissociation induced by clinical hypnosis, especially in low hypnotizable persons. Hence, VRH technology allows to deliver clinical hypnosis - and its related benefits- to a considerably greater number of patients. This automated way of delivering hypnosis responds to most of the limitations of the use of clinical hypnosis mentioned supra (e.g. availability of trained staff, language barrier,…).
To date, the Oncomfort's Digital Sedation™ is used in more than 100 hospitals, and more than 80 000 patients have already beneficiated from this type of VRH in daily clinical practice (e.g. interventional radiology, oncology, surgery,…). In line with its intended use, first studies have demonstrated that Digital Sedation™ reduces both experimental and clinical pain, as well as procedural anxiety. In addition, preliminary results indicate that it might replace midazolam during endoscopic urologic surgery, avoiding the respiratory side effects associated with pharmacological sedation. Over the last year, at the CHU of Liège, Digital Sedation™ has been offered to patients during orthopedic surgeries, demonstrating the feasibility of using VRH during TKAs performed under spinal anesthesia. While results seem to be positive in terms of performance of the procedure and patient satisfaction, the potential beneficial impact of this solution has not been systematically addressed yet. The goal of the present study is to objectify those effects, and in particular, to determine whether VRH can replace - at least in part- the intraoperative administration of midazolam, allowing to avoid its associated side effects while ensuring a similar patient's comfort.
Conditions
See the medical conditions and disease areas that this research is targeting or investigating.
Study Design
Understand how the trial is structured, including allocation methods, masking strategies, primary purpose, and other design elements.
RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
NONE
Study Groups
Review each arm or cohort in the study, along with the interventions and objectives associated with them.
Control Group
During the procedure, the patient in the control group receives pharmacological sedation, which is the standard of care currently practiced. Such sedation allows intraoperative anxiolysis, which is constantly required by patients in order to dissociate from their surroundings. Recall that total knee replacement surgery is extremely noisy, and the surrounding environment is itself an anxiety-provoking factor for the patient. Light to moderate, intraoperative sedation is carried out by intermittent boluses of midazolam 1 mg IV. Boluses are given every 5 minutes until a sedation level of -2 or -3 on the RASS (Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale) scale is reached.
Patients randomized to the control group will undergo perioperative anesthesia according to the current standards of care, without the addition of the VR headset or headphones.
Midazolam sedation
During the procedure, the patient in the control group receives pharmacological sedation, which is the standard of care currently practiced. Such sedation allows intraoperative anxiolysis, which is constantly required by patients in order to dissociate from their surroundings. Recall that total knee replacement surgery is extremely noisy, and the surrounding environment is itself an anxiety-provoking factor for the patient. Light to moderate, intraoperative sedation is carried out by intermittent boluses of midazolam 1 mg IV. Boluses are given every 5 minutes until a sedation level of -2 or -3 on the RASS (Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale) scale is reached.
VRH Group
They will experience an underwater experience while listening to hypnotic script designed to induce a change in state of consciousness, increasing parasympathetic system tone and relaxation response, and reducing the perception of painful stimuli.
During the whole procedure, an anesthesiologist will perform the usual cares, including closely monitoring, and will administrate intravenous sedation (midazolam) when necessary (see sedation protocol in the previous section).
VRH
The VR headset and headphones will be placed on patients after the spinal anesthesia, once the patient is positioned and the surgical drapes installed. Patients will then undergo a 120-minute Digital Sedation™ program (Aqua+© 120 Version 1.1 or subsequent version, Oncomfort SA, Waver, Belgium). They will experience an underwater experience while listening to hypnotic script designed to induce a change in state of consciousness, increasing parasympathetic system tone and relaxation response, and reducing the perception of painful stimuli. While the session is running, HCPs can see what is projected into the VRH headset on their Sedakit's X2 controller (i.e. the tablet connected to the glasses).
Midazolam sedation
During the procedure, the patient in the control group receives pharmacological sedation, which is the standard of care currently practiced. Such sedation allows intraoperative anxiolysis, which is constantly required by patients in order to dissociate from their surroundings. Recall that total knee replacement surgery is extremely noisy, and the surrounding environment is itself an anxiety-provoking factor for the patient. Light to moderate, intraoperative sedation is carried out by intermittent boluses of midazolam 1 mg IV. Boluses are given every 5 minutes until a sedation level of -2 or -3 on the RASS (Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale) scale is reached.
Interventions
Learn about the drugs, procedures, or behavioral strategies being tested and how they are applied within this trial.
VRH
The VR headset and headphones will be placed on patients after the spinal anesthesia, once the patient is positioned and the surgical drapes installed. Patients will then undergo a 120-minute Digital Sedation™ program (Aqua+© 120 Version 1.1 or subsequent version, Oncomfort SA, Waver, Belgium). They will experience an underwater experience while listening to hypnotic script designed to induce a change in state of consciousness, increasing parasympathetic system tone and relaxation response, and reducing the perception of painful stimuli. While the session is running, HCPs can see what is projected into the VRH headset on their Sedakit's X2 controller (i.e. the tablet connected to the glasses).
Midazolam sedation
During the procedure, the patient in the control group receives pharmacological sedation, which is the standard of care currently practiced. Such sedation allows intraoperative anxiolysis, which is constantly required by patients in order to dissociate from their surroundings. Recall that total knee replacement surgery is extremely noisy, and the surrounding environment is itself an anxiety-provoking factor for the patient. Light to moderate, intraoperative sedation is carried out by intermittent boluses of midazolam 1 mg IV. Boluses are given every 5 minutes until a sedation level of -2 or -3 on the RASS (Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale) scale is reached.
Eligibility Criteria
Check the participation requirements, including inclusion and exclusion rules, age limits, and whether healthy volunteers are accepted.
Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
2. ASA status \> 3
3. Head or face wounds precluding use of the device.
4. Schizophrenia or dissociative disorder.
5. Pregnancy.
6. Chronic renal insufficiency or severe hepatic insufficiency.
7. Non-proficiency in French (Research language).
8. Phobia of deep water.
9. Chronic pain and/or chronic analgesics consumption.
10. Medication affecting the autonomic nervous system.
11. Revision surgery.
12. Dizziness.
18 Years
99 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
Meet the organizations funding or collaborating on the study and learn about their roles.
University of Liege
OTHER
Responsible Party
Identify the individual or organization who holds primary responsibility for the study information submitted to regulators.
Michele Carella
Head of Clinic
Locations
Explore where the study is taking place and check the recruitment status at each participating site.
CHU de Liège
Liège, , Belgium
Countries
Review the countries where the study has at least one active or historical site.
References
Explore related publications, articles, or registry entries linked to this study.
Carella M, Beck F, Quoilin C, Azongmo MM, Loheac A, Bonhomme VL, Vanhaudenhuyse A. Effect of virtual reality hypnosis on intraoperative sedation needs and functional recovery in knee arthroplasty: a prospective randomized clinical trial. Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2025 May 6;50(5):383-389. doi: 10.1136/rapm-2023-105261.
Other Identifiers
Review additional registry numbers or institutional identifiers associated with this trial.
VRH.TKA
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
More Related Trials
Additional clinical trials that may be relevant based on similarity analysis.