Rationale and Design of the Awake Prone Position for Early Hypoxemia in COVID-19 Study Protocol: A Clinical Trial.
Michael A GarciaGarrett L RamponGheorghe DorosShijing JiaNikhil JaganKari R GillmeyerAndrew BericalJames HudspethMichael H IeongKatherine L ModzelewskiElissa M Schechter-PerkinsCraig S RossJustin M RucciSteven Q SimpsonAllan Jay WalkeyNicholas A BoschPublished in: Annals of the American Thoracic Society (2021)
The unprecedented public health burdens of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) have intensified the urgency of identifying effective, low-cost treatments that limit the need for advanced life support measures and improve clinical outcomes. However, personal protective equipment and staffing shortages, disease virulence, and infectivity have created significant barriers to traditional clinical trial practices. We present the novel design of a pragmatic, adaptive, multicenter, international, prospective randomized controlled clinical trial evaluating the safety and effectiveness of awake prone positioning in spontaneously breathing patients with COVID-19 (APPEX-19 [Awake Prone Position for Early Hypoxemia in COVID-19]). Key innovations of this trial include 1) a novel smartphone-based communication process that facilitates rapid enrollment and intervention delivery while allowing social distancing and conservation of personal protective equipment, 2) Bayesian response-adaptive randomization to allow preferential assignment to the most effective intervention and expedite trial completion compared with frequentist designs, 3) remote electronic collection of patient-reported outcomes and electronic medical record data, and 4) pragmatic prospective use of patient-reported data and data collected as part of routine clinical care. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT04344587).
Keyphrases
- study protocol
- coronavirus disease
- clinical trial
- randomized controlled trial
- phase ii
- sars cov
- public health
- phase iii
- patient reported outcomes
- open label
- healthcare
- double blind
- patient reported
- low cost
- electronic health record
- deep brain stimulation
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- big data
- palliative care
- primary care
- mental health
- escherichia coli
- staphylococcus aureus
- placebo controlled
- affordable care act
- global health
- antimicrobial resistance
- biofilm formation
- machine learning