Influence of Cooling duration on Efficacy in Cardiac Arrest Patients (ICECAP): study protocol for a multicenter, randomized, adaptive allocation clinical trial to identify the optimal duration of induced hypothermia for neuroprotection in comatose, adult survivors of after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
William J. Meurer,
Florian F. Schmitzberger,
Sharon Yeatts,
Viswanathan Ramakrishnan,
Benjamin Abella,
Tom Aufderheide,
William Barsan,
Justin Benoit,
Scott Berry,
Joy Black,
Nia Bozeman,
Kristine Broglio,
Jeremy Brown,
Kimberly Brown,
Noelle Carlozzi,
Angela Caveney,
Sung-Min Cho,
Hangyul Chung-Esaki,
Robert Clevenger,
Robin Conwit,
Richelle Cooper,
Valentina Crudo,
Mohamud Daya,
Deneil Harney,
Cindy Hsu,
Nicholas J. Johnson,
Imad Khan,
Shaveta Khosla,
Peyton Kline,
Anna Kratz,
Peter Kudenchuk,
Roger J. Lewis,
Chaitra Madiyal,
Sara Meyer,
Jarrod Mosier,
Marwan Mouammar,
Matthew Neth,
Brian O’Neil,
James Paxton,
Sofia Perez,
Sarah Perman,
Cemal Sozener,
Mickie Speers,
Aimee Spiteri,
Valerie Stevenson,
Kavita Sunthankar,
Joseph Tonna,
Scott Youngquist,
Romergryko Geocadin,
Robert Silbergleit,
ICECAP trial investigators
Affiliations
William J. Meurer
Emergency Medicine, Neurology, University of Michigan
Florian F. Schmitzberger
Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan
Sharon Yeatts
Public Health Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina
Viswanathan Ramakrishnan
Public Health Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina
Benjamin Abella
Emergency Medicine, University of Pennsylvania
Tom Aufderheide
Emergency Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin
William Barsan
Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan
Justin Benoit
Emergency Medicine, University of Cincinnati
Scott Berry
Berry Consultants
Joy Black
Emergency Medicine, Neuroscience, University of Michigan, Thermo Fisher Scientific
Abstract Background Cardiac arrest is a common and devastating emergency of both the heart and brain. More than 380,000 patients suffer out-of-hospital cardiac arrest annually in the USA. Induced cooling of comatose patients markedly improved neurological and functional outcomes in pivotal randomized clinical trials, but the optimal duration of therapeutic hypothermia has not yet been established. Methods This study is a multi-center randomized, response-adaptive, duration (dose) finding, comparative effectiveness clinical trial with blinded outcome assessment. We investigate two populations of adult comatose survivors of cardiac arrest to ascertain the shortest duration of cooling that provides the maximum treatment effect. The design is based on a statistical model of response as defined by the primary endpoint, a weighted 90-day mRS (modified Rankin Scale, a measure of neurologic disability), across the treatment arms. Subjects will initially be equally randomized between 12, 24, and 48 h of therapeutic cooling. After the first 200 subjects have been randomized, additional treatment arms between 12 and 48 h will be opened and patients will be allocated, within each initial cardiac rhythm type (shockable or non-shockable), by response adaptive randomization. As the trial continues, shorter and longer duration arms may be opened. A maximum sample size of 1800 subjects is proposed. Secondary objectives are to characterize: the overall safety and adverse events associated with duration of cooling, the effect on neuropsychological outcomes, and the effect on patient-reported quality of life measures. Discussion In vitro and in vivo studies have shown the neuroprotective effects of therapeutic hypothermia for cardiac arrest. We hypothesize that longer durations of cooling may improve either the proportion of patients that attain a good neurological recovery or may result in better recovery among the proportion already categorized as having a good outcome. If the treatment effect of cooling is increasing across duration, for at least some set of durations, then this provides evidence of the efficacy of cooling itself versus normothermia, even in the absence of a normothermia control arm, confirming previous RCTs for OHCA survivors of shockable rhythms and provides the first prospective controlled evidence of efficacy in those without initial shockable rhythms. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04217551. Registered on 30 December 2019.