The Paediatric Refill Study (PRefill)
NCT02208817 · Status: COMPLETED · Type: OBSERVATIONAL · Enrollment: 75
Last updated 2016-05-19
Summary
2 recent national reports 'Why Children Die' and 'Are we there yet?'identified deficiencies in recognising and managing sick children. Key recommendations from both reviews included the development and adoption of 'track and trigger' or a paediatric early warning score (PEWS) to better identify the sick or deteriorating child. PEWS tools offer the potential to identify and respond sooner to clinical deterioration. Capillary refill time (CRT) is a measure of skin blood flow and is a vital part of many early warning and resuscitation scores. It is a sensitive marker of infection and dehydration in children. However, due to how it is performed and interpreted CRT is prone to marked variability between observers.
We have Medical Research Council (MRC) funding to develop an automated capillary refill device and user interface to provide a paediatric continuous early warning (PaedCEW) monitoring system. The PaedCEW system would complement and support current clinical practice and aim to address the difficulties of recognising ill children.
We aim to recruit 20 ill children on the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) with 2 matched controls without significant illness from the Nottingham Children's Hospital. The 20 ill children will have their CRT (and PaedCEW score) monitored before, during and after admission to PICU. This will allow correlation with invasive (BP, central venous oxygen saturations, lactate) and noninvasive (CRT, heart rate, cardiac output) measures of cardiovascular status during periods of stability and compromise. Matched controls will be monitored for around 24 hours. This pilot study will allow development of our system.
This is a proof of concept study. This study aims to demonstrate a novel device for measuring CRT. Its correlation with noninvasive measures of cardiovascular status will enable a pragmatic comparison with current clinical practice. In addition, correlation with invasive measures of cardiovascular status will enable us to calculate sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value (NPV) and positive predictive value (PPV).
Conditions
- Septicaemia
- Deformity of Spine
- Trauma
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
University of Nottingham
lead OTHER
Principal Investigators
-
Don Sharkey, PhD · University of Nottingham
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 1 Month
- Max Age
- 15 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2014-08-31
- Primary Completion
- 2016-03-31
- Completion
- 2016-05-31
Countries
- United Kingdom
Study Locations
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