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Alpha 2 agonists for sedation to produce better outcomes from critical illness (A2B Trial): protocol for a multicentre phase 3 pragmatic clinical and cost-effectiveness randomised trial in the UK

Walsh, Timothy Simon; Aitken, Leanne M; McKenzie, Cathrine A; Boyd, Julia; Macdonald, Alix; Giddings, Annabel; Hope, David; Norrie, John; Weir, Christopher; Parker, Richard Anthony; Lone, Nazir I; Emerson, Lydia; Kydonaki, Kalliopi; Creagh-Brown, Benedict; Morris, Stephen; McAuley, Daniel Francis; Dark, Paul; Wise, Matt P; Gordon, Anthony C; Perkins, Gavin; Reade, Michael; Blackwood, Bronagh; MacLullich, Alasdair; Glen, Robert; Page, Valerie J

Authors

Timothy Simon Walsh

Leanne M Aitken

Cathrine A McKenzie

Julia Boyd

Alix Macdonald

Annabel Giddings

David Hope

John Norrie

Christopher Weir

Richard Anthony Parker

Nazir I Lone

Benedict Creagh-Brown

Stephen Morris

Daniel Francis McAuley

Paul Dark

Matt P Wise

Anthony C Gordon

Gavin Perkins

Michael Reade

Bronagh Blackwood

Alasdair MacLullich

Robert Glen

Valerie J Page



Abstract

Introduction: Almost all patients receiving mechanical ventilation (MV) in intensive care units (ICUs) require analgesia and sedation. The most widely used sedative drug is propofol, but there is uncertainty whether alpha2-agonists are superior. The alpha 2 agonists for sedation to produce better outcomes from critical illness (A2B) trial aims to determine whether clonidine or dexmedetomidine (or both) are clinically and cost-effective in MV ICU patients compared with usual care.

Methods and analysis: Adult ICU patients within 48 hours of starting MV, expected to require at least 24 hours further MV, are randomised in an open-label three arm trial to receive propofol (usual care) or clonidine or dexmedetomidine as primary sedative, plus analgesia according to local practice. Exclusions include patients with primary brain injury; postcardiac arrest; other neurological conditions; or bradycardia. Unless clinically contraindicated, sedation is titrated using weight-based dosing guidance to achieve a Richmond-Agitation-Sedation score of −2 or greater as early as considered safe by clinicians. The primary outcome is time to successful extubation. Secondary ICU outcomes include delirium and coma incidence/duration, sedation quality, predefined adverse events, mortality and ICU length of stay. Post-ICU outcomes include mortality, anxiety and depression, post-traumatic stress, cognitive function and health-related quality of life at 6-month follow-up. A process evaluation and health economic evaluation are embedded in the trial.

The analytic framework uses a hierarchical approach to maximise efficiency and control type I error. Stage 1 tests whether each alpha2-agonist is superior to propofol. If either/both interventions are superior, stages 2 and 3 testing explores which alpha2-agonist is more effective. To detect a mean difference of 2 days in MV duration, we aim to recruit 1437 patients (479 per group) in 40–50 UK ICUs.

Ethics and dissemination: The Scotland A REC approved the trial (18/SS/0085). We use a surrogate decision-maker or deferred consent model consistent with UK law. Dissemination will be via publications, presentations and updated guidelines.

Citation

Walsh, T. S., Aitken, L. M., McKenzie, C. A., Boyd, J., Macdonald, A., Giddings, A., Hope, D., Norrie, J., Weir, C., Parker, R. A., Lone, N. I., Emerson, L., Kydonaki, K., Creagh-Brown, B., Morris, S., McAuley, D. F., Dark, P., Wise, M. P., Gordon, A. C., Perkins, G., …Page, V. J. (2023). Alpha 2 agonists for sedation to produce better outcomes from critical illness (A2B Trial): protocol for a multicentre phase 3 pragmatic clinical and cost-effectiveness randomised trial in the UK. BMJ Open, 13(12), Article e078645. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-078645

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 17, 2023
Online Publication Date Dec 10, 2023
Publication Date 2023-12
Deposit Date Dec 12, 2023
Publicly Available Date Dec 13, 2023
Journal BMJ Open
Electronic ISSN 2044-6055
Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 13
Issue 12
Article Number e078645
DOI https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-078645
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/3421672

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