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Clinical Effectiveness of the "PICU Up!" Multifaceted Early Mobility Intervention for Critically Ill Children
Sponsor: Johns Hopkins University
Summary
While mortality in U.S. pediatric intensive care units (PICUs) is improving, surviving children frequently develop persistent physical, cognitive, and psychological impairments. Over half of critically ill children experience potentially preventable PICU-acquired morbidities, with mechanically ventilated children being at greatest risk. In critically ill adults, randomized trials have shown that progressive mobility, started early (within 3 days of initiating mechanical ventilation), decreases muscle weakness and the duration of mechanical ventilation. However, similar randomized studies have not been conducted in the PICU. The investigator's prior studies revealed that less than 10 percent of critically ill children at the highest risk of functional decline are evaluated by a physical or occupational therapist within 3 days of PICU admission. Given the interplay of sedation, delirium, sleep, and immobility in the PICU, single-component interventions, such as sedation protocolization, have not consistently shown benefit for decreasing mechanical ventilation duration. Thus, the investigators developed the first pediatric-specific, interprofessional intervention (PICU Up!) to integrate goal-directed sedation, delirium prevention, sleep promotion, and family engagement into daily PICU care in order to facilitate early and progressive mobility. The investigators have demonstrated the safety and feasibility of this pragmatic, multifaceted strategy in both single-site and multicenter pilot studies. Hence, the next phase of the investigators research is to evaluate the clinical effectiveness and delivery of the PICU Up! intervention across a range of PICU patients and health systems. The investigators propose a pragmatic, stepped-wedge, cluster randomized controlled trial that will include 10 academic and community hospitals in the United States, with the following Aims: 1) Evaluate if the PICU Up! intervention, delivered under real-world conditions, decreases mechanical ventilation duration (primary outcome) and improves delirium and functional status compared to usual care in critically ill children; and 2) Conduct a multi-stakeholder, mixed-methods process evaluation to identify key contextual factors associated with delivery of PICU Up!. If proven effective, the PICU Up! intervention has potential to profoundly change medical care in the PICU and substantially impact public health by improving outcomes for the growing number of pediatric survivors of critical illness.
Official title: Clinical Effectiveness of the "PICU Up!" Multifaceted Early Mobility Intervention for Critically Ill Children: A Pragmatic, Stepped-wedge Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
Any - 18 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
1440
Start Date
2022-08-08
Completion Date
2026-09-30
Last Updated
2026-03-18
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
PICU Up!
PICU Up! incorporates the screening process for determining a patient's appropriate activity level into the daily rounding workflow for all PICU patients, with a tiered activity plan based on clinical parameters to individualize goals based on each child's unique needs. While the patient's PICU Up! level is based on objective criteria, the interprofessional team collectively determines the daily activity goal(s) through shared decision-making which is documented in the medical record on morning rounds. The intervention facilitates daily discussion of 1) analgesia; 2) extubation readiness testing; 3) sedation level and goal; 4) delirium screening and management; 5) mobility goal including physical and occupational therapy consultation by PICU Day 3; 6) sleep promotion; and 7) family engagement in mobility.
Locations (11)
Valley Children's Hospital
Madera, California, United States
Nemours Children's Hospital of the Nemours Foundation
Orlando, Florida, United States
Norton Children's Hospital: University of Louisville
Louisville, Kentucky, United States
Johns Hopkins Hospital
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Hennepin Healthcare: University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Children's Hospital at Dartmouth: Geisel School of Medicine
Lebanon, New Hampshire, United States
UNC Children's: University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States
Janet Weis Children's Hospital: Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine
Danville, Pennsylvania, United States
Texas Children's Hospital: Baylor College of Medicine
Houston, Texas, United States
West Virginia University Medicine Children's: West Virginia University
Morgantown, West Virginia, United States
Children's Hospital of Wisconsin: Medical College of Wisconsin
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States