Developmental Intervention for Hospitalized Newborns With Congenital Heart Disease
NCT ID: NCT05885113
Last Updated: 2023-11-15
Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
30 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2023-10-10
2025-05-01
Brief Summary
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The investigators propose the first randomized controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of IDR as an intervention for children with CHD. The investigators hypothesize infants receiving IDC provided in the hospital, compared to those not receiving IDC, will show improved medical outcomes (including shorter hospital stay, improved oral feeding, increased growth), improved developmental competence, and increased parent coping at the time of discharge home and 3 months after discharge. With support from the Children's Heart Foundation, the investigators can demonstrate the feasibility and safety of implementing IDC in the CICU, the potential to improve the ND outcome for infants with CHD and increase parent well-being. This study would serve as the needed pilot study to request funding for a larger multicenter trial which would impact CICU care of infants with CHD and their families around the world.
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Detailed Description
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The proposed study would thus be the first to test the feasibility of IDC as a hospital intervention for very high-risk newborns with CHD. In this pilot single-center, single blind, before-and-after feasibility study, the investigators will compare two types of experience, standard newborn care (SOC) and the newborn intervention of developmental care (IDC) strictly following the NIDCAP model of care in the cardiology inpatient unit. The investigators will focus on the process of implementing NIDCAP care in cardiology. Following this feasibility study, the researchers will then identify strategies to address the noted challenges and/or revise components of the intervention prior to designing a multisite study to more formally evaluate the NIDCAP intervention in cardiology. Specific aims are as follows:
Primary Aim: To describe feasibility for providing IDC for infants with CHD while inpatient in cardiology. The investigators will describe organizational/contextual factors, which influence future implementation trial methods, such as recruitment, retention, data collection procedures, implementation of study protocol, and any safety concerns.
Hypothesis 1: IDC will be feasible to implement in the CICU and the cardiology step down unit/ Acute Cardiology Care Unit (ACCU). Infants who receive the IDC intervention will show an appropriate level (score of 3.5 or higher) of developmental care at the bedside during caregiving on the measure of developmental care (NIDCAP Organizational Structures Assessment13 (OSA)) scored by a study observer blind to study group. The IDC group infants will have higher scores on the OSA measurement of developmental care at the bedside than the SOC group infants.
Hypothesis 2: It will be possible to recruit enough patients into the study over the two year time frame. The investigators will collect the number of patients eligible for the study, number approached for the study, the number consented, and those that discontinue or drop from the study, along with reasoning for why someone did not meet criteria or choose to leave the study. .
Hypothesis 3: There will be no safety concerns as reported by the Safety Event Reporting System (SERS) in connection with this NIDCAP study. The investigators will review each month the number of SERS reported in the CICU and ACCU related to the study.
Secondary Aims
1. To describe the feasibility of collecting the developmental outcome assessments in this cardiac population.
Hypothesis 1: It will be feasible to collect the Neonatal Network Neurobehavioral Scale II (NNNS) and the Developmental Assessment of Young Children-Second Edition (DAYC-2) on this population of infants. The number of missing variables will be assessed.
2. To demonstrate sufficient differentiation of developmental care and to estimate potential effect sizes to inform the design of an adequately powered trial (using the OSA scores and parent diaries).
3. To describe feasibility of increasing parent participation at the bedside, large component of NIDCAP care, for infants with CHD while inpatient in cardiology.
Hypothesis 1: Infants in the intervention group (IDC), receiving NIDCAP care will have parents who are more engaged at the bedside with higher scores (indicated increased engagement) on the Parent Risk Evaluation and Engagement Model Instrument (PREEMI) than parents of infants receiving SOC.
Hypothesis 2: Due to the increased attention to parent infant interaction given through the NIDCAP intervention, parents in the IDC group will report more time at the bedside and more daily interaction with their child on the daily diary of care than parents in the SOC group.
Our feasibility trial will provide the first, urgently needed, proof-of-concept that IDC can be implemented in hospitalized critically ill newborns with CHD. When proven to be successful, this study will provide information vital to funding of a multicenter randomized trial further expanding the knowledge of IDC for infants with CHD.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
SEQUENTIAL
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Intervention
NIDCAP developmental care group receiving intervention
NIDCAP Developmental Care
The intervention of Individualized Developmental Care (IDC) is designed to minimize the mismatch between the fragile infant brain's expectations and the experiences of stress and pain inherent in the hospital environment. An ICU that provides individualized, developmentally-supportive care includes a soothing environment, supports parents as their child's primary caregiver, providing continual adjustment of caregiving in support of the child's wellbeing by reading the infant's cues and providing interventions to calmness throughout caregiving, capitalizing on the infant's strengths, and providing supports toward healing, growth and learning. NIDCAP is the experimental intervention to be tested in the current study. NIDCAP is the only evidence-based, comprehensive, internationally recognized program of IDC.
standard of care
NO intervention, control group, receiving standard of care
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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NIDCAP Developmental Care
The intervention of Individualized Developmental Care (IDC) is designed to minimize the mismatch between the fragile infant brain's expectations and the experiences of stress and pain inherent in the hospital environment. An ICU that provides individualized, developmentally-supportive care includes a soothing environment, supports parents as their child's primary caregiver, providing continual adjustment of caregiving in support of the child's wellbeing by reading the infant's cues and providing interventions to calmness throughout caregiving, capitalizing on the infant's strengths, and providing supports toward healing, growth and learning. NIDCAP is the experimental intervention to be tested in the current study. NIDCAP is the only evidence-based, comprehensive, internationally recognized program of IDC.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* diagnoses of complex CHD with need for open heart surgery within the first two weeks of life (for example: total anomalous pulmonary venous connection, transposition of the great arteries, truncus arteriosus, VSD with interrupted aortic arch)
* free from associated extracardiac anomalies that are moderate or severe
* free from previous cardiac surgery or associated cardiovascular anomalies
* GA greater than 37 weeks
* 1 and 5 minute Apgar ≥ 4
* free of known chromosomal and congenital abnormalities (e.g., Down syndrome, 22q11 deletion, Noonan syndrome, Williams syndrome)
* free from multiple congenital anomalies (e.g., CHARGE syndrome)
* mother's age ≥ 20 ≤ 45 years
* absence of reported maternal alcohol, nicotine, or illegal drug use by maternal report and medical record review
* telephone/internet access.
Exclusion Criteria
4 Months
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Boston Children's Hospital
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Samantha Butler
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigators
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Samantha Butler, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Boston Children's Hospital
Locations
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Boston Children's Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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References
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Sood E, Berends WM, Butcher JL, Lisanti AJ, Medoff-Cooper B, Singer J, Willen E, Butler S. Developmental Care in North American Pediatric Cardiac Intensive Care Units: Survey of Current Practices. Adv Neonatal Care. 2016 Jun;16(3):211-9. doi: 10.1097/ANC.0000000000000264.
Lisanti AJ, Vittner D, Medoff-Cooper B, Fogel J, Wernovsky G, Butler S. Individualized Family-Centered Developmental Care: An Essential Model to Address the Unique Needs of Infants With Congenital Heart Disease. J Cardiovasc Nurs. 2019 Jan/Feb;34(1):85-93. doi: 10.1097/JCN.0000000000000546.
Butler SC, Sadhwani A, Stopp C, Singer J, Wypij D, Dunbar-Masterson C, Ware J, Newburger JW. Neurodevelopmental assessment of infants with congenital heart disease in the early postoperative period. Congenit Heart Dis. 2019 Mar;14(2):236-245. doi: 10.1111/chd.12686. Epub 2018 Oct 15.
Miller TA, Lisanti AJ, Witte MK, Elhoff JJ, Mahle WT, Uzark KC, Alexander N, Butler SC. A Collaborative Learning Assessment of Developmental Care Practices for Infants in the Cardiac Intensive Care Unit. J Pediatr. 2020 May;220:93-100. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2020.01.043. Epub 2020 Mar 5.
Als H, Duffy FH, McAnulty GB, Rivkin MJ, Vajapeyam S, Mulkern RV, Warfield SK, Huppi PS, Butler SC, Conneman N, Fischer C, Eichenwald EC. Early experience alters brain function and structure. Pediatrics. 2004 Apr;113(4):846-57. doi: 10.1542/peds.113.4.846.
Marino BS, Lipkin PH, Newburger JW, Peacock G, Gerdes M, Gaynor JW, Mussatto KA, Uzark K, Goldberg CS, Johnson WH Jr, Li J, Smith SE, Bellinger DC, Mahle WT; American Heart Association Congenital Heart Defects Committee, Council on Cardiovascular Disease in the Young, Council on Cardiovascular Nursing, and Stroke Council. Neurodevelopmental outcomes in children with congenital heart disease: evaluation and management: a scientific statement from the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2012 Aug 28;126(9):1143-72. doi: 10.1161/CIR.0b013e318265ee8a. Epub 2012 Jul 30.
Other Identifiers
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IRB-P00044306
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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