Magnesium Trial in Acute Asthma in Emergency Department
NCT06785272 · Status: RECRUITING · Phase: PHASE3 · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 192
Last updated 2025-12-18
Summary
Despite optimal initial emergency department (ED) therapy, 50% of children with severe acute asthma have ongoing moderate-severe respiratory distress. Guidelines recommend intravenous magnesium (IVMg) for them, yet evidence for IVMg efficacy is scant and disparate. While early small Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs) suggested hospitalization benefit, recent large observational studies found no association between IVMg and improved outcomes. IVMg therapy is resource-intensive, can cause hypotension and demands close monitoring. Previous RCTs only assessed early Mg effect at 1-2 hours, overlooked the peak effect of key co-interventions such as corticosteroids and did not use validated scores. IVMg use is variable and often delayed until ≥4 hours after ED therapy is started and after the hospitalization decision has been made. Thus, in observational studies children given IVMg are 6-10 times more likely to be hospitalized; these studies have major confounding and the true IVMg treatment effect is thus unknown. To conclusively determine if IVMg alters the exacerbation course, it must be given early, and the primary outcome measure should be the severity of respiratory distress measured at the peak effect of key co-interventions to focus on a clinically meaningful and objective effect. The Pediatric Respiratory Assessment Measure (PRAM)-a valid, discriminative, reproducible and responsive-to-change instrument-is thus the ideal primary outcome measure. Hospitalization outcome has major confounding by indication and MD perceptions.
Primary Aim: In children with acute asthma remaining in moderate-severe distress after 1 hour of initial ED therapy, is early IVMg therapy associated with a significantly greater improvement in respiratory distress, measured by PRAM, at 2 hours after starting the intervention, compared to placebo? Hypothesis: IVMg will yield significantly greater PRAM improvement of ≥1.0 point than placebo.
Expected Outcomes: This trial will clarify if there is an incremental benefit of IVMg in decreasing respiratory distress in pediatric refractory acute asthma. A positive result will establish a proven standard of care for this indication, with a need for Knowledge Translation (KT) to implement routine early IVMg therapy. A negative result will lead to de-implementation of IVMg which may also lead to cost savings.
Conditions
Interventions
- DRUG
-
magnesium sulfate
After initial therapy with the systemic CSs routinely used for acute asthma management at a given site, 3 treatments with inhaled salbutamol and ipratropium, eligible patients with PRAM ≥5 will, under the care of the research nurse, receive a 30-minute IV infusion of 75 mg/kg of Mg sulfate(maximum 2.0 g) \[experimental group\]
- DRUG
-
Normal Saline
After initial therapy with the systemic CSs routinely used for acute asthma management at a given site, 3 treatments with inhaled salbutamol and ipratropium, eligible patients with PRAM ≥5 will, under the care of the research nurse, receive a 30-minute IV infusion of 0.9% saline \[control group\].
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Alberta Children's Hospital
collaborator OTHER -
McMaster Children's Hospital
collaborator OTHER -
Stollery Children's Hospital
collaborator OTHER -
Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario
collaborator OTHER -
St. Justine's Hospital
collaborator OTHER -
The Hospital for Sick Children
collaborator OTHER -
Suzanne Schuh
lead OTHER
Principal Investigators
-
Suzanne Schuh, MD · The Hospital for Sick Children
Study Design
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Masking
- QUADRUPLE
- Model
- PARALLEL
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 2 Years
- Max Age
- 17 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2025-10-08
- Primary Completion
- 2027-10-31
- Completion
- 2027-10-31
Countries
- Canada
Study Locations
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