The Physiology of Circulatory Arrest in Humans (EVALUATE)

November 10, 2024 updated by: Myp Sekhon, University of British Columbia

Characterizing the Cerebrovascular Physiology of Circulatory Death During Withdrawal of Life Sustaining Therapies in Humans

The purpose of this study is to better understand what happens in the brain during the dying process.

This is a prospective observational study conducted at the end of life in the ICU at VGH. At the time of withdrawal of life sustaining therapies the investigators will monitor brain blood flow and oxygenation. The investigators will also collect blood samples to measure biomarkers of brain dysfunction.

This may help us to determine when blood flow to the brain stops and when brain function ceases. This information may provide researchers and the medical community as a whole with important information as to the best timing for organ donation. This study is the first step in commencing a research program related to improving the organ donation process. Our goal is to determine how best to provide high quality organs to those who would otherwise die without an organ transplant.

Study Overview

Status

Recruiting

Conditions

Intervention / Treatment

Detailed Description

MAIN STUDY

PURPOSE The goal of this project is to characterize the cerebrovascular physiology of circulatory death during withdrawal of life sustaining measures in humans.

JUSTIFICATION Death is defined as the permanent loss of brain function following absence of cerebral blood flow (CBF). Such physiology can result from two clinical scenarios: a) absent CBF in patients with a beating heart (neurological brain death) or b) after natural circulatory arrest. In the latter scenario, eventual cessation of innate cardiac output leads to absent CBF, brain tissue oxygenation and irreversible loss of brain function. Pertinent to solid organ transplantation, death must occur prior to consideration of organ donation. In the setting of circulatory death, withdrawal of life-sustaining measures (WLSM) is undertaken and organ donation commences after the declaration of death. This process is termed controlled donation after cardiac death (DCD). Due to the scarcity of available organ donation opportunities, the emergence of DCD has provided increased access to life-saving solid organ transplants for recipients. However, challenges remain with respect to successes of DCD graft organ function and optimal recipient outcomes. Principally, the timeliness from WLSM to circulatory death declaration is crucial to graft viability with prolonged periods associated with worse graft organ ischemia, function and adverse recipient outcomes. To this extent, the determination of the precise timing of death determination during DCD is imperative to inform timely diagnosis of death and optimize retrieval of high-quality grafts for solid organ transplant recipients.

The characterization of the cerebrovascular physiology of circulatory death in humans has knowledge gaps. Current guidelines define a pulse pressure < 5mmHg (systolic - diastolic blood pressure) using radial arterial line monitoring as the acceptable threshold for timing of circulatory death. Although pragmatic, this definition assumes that in vivo hemodynamic physiology generated by the heart (reflected by the arterial line) is simultaneously reflected in the cerebral circulation. It is well known that systemic hemodynamics do not necessarily correlate with cerebral hemodynamics during critical illness. Pathophysiologic sequelae (e.g. elevated intracranial pressure) in critically ill acutely brain injured patients who undergo WLSM suggest that cerebral perfusion may cease before systemic hemodynamics (detected by radial arterial line monitoring) deteriorate irreversibly. As such, it is plausible that cerebral perfusion ceases before a pulse pressure < 5mmHg is achieved thereby setting the conditions by which the physiologic requirement of circulatory death is present (absent CBF) but the clinical definition has not (pulse pressure < 5mmHg) been reached. Clinically, this scenario would expose viable graft organs to prolonged ischemia and negatively affect solid organ transplant recipient outcomes

HYPOTHESES AND AIMS

OBJECTIVES and associated HYPOTHESIS Aim 1 (Cerebral Hemodynamics): To determine the pulse pressure (measured with an in situ radial arterial catheter) at which cerebral hemodynamics cease (measured with transcranial Doppler derived middle [MCA-Fv] and posterior cerebral artery blood flow velocities [PCA-Fv]) following WLSM. The investigators hypothesize that cerebral hemodynamics will cease when the pulse pressure is > 5mmHg.

Aim 2 (Feasibility): To measure the feasibility to conducting multimodal monitoring and data collection during the dying process in humans until circulatory arrest. Specific physiologic variables being collected during the dying process include telemetry, peripheral oximetry, mean arterial pressure monitoring, PCA-Fv & MCA-Fv, jugular venous bulb oximetry, pulmonary artery mixed venous oximetry and regional oxygen saturation (from near infrared spectroscopy). The investigators hypothesize that feasibility will be strong and we will successfully gather > 80% of data points for each case.

Aim 3) To evaluate relationship between mean arterial pressure (mmHg) and brain blood flow velocity (cm/sec) during the dying process in humans until circulatory arrest.

Aim 4) To evaluate relationship between mean arterial pressure (mmHg) and oxygen extraction fraction (%) and regional oxygen saturation (%) during the dying process in humans until circulatory arrest.

Aim 5: The investigate the impact of brain biomarker release during the ischemic phase of the dying process in humans until circulatory arrest. The investigators hypothesize that brain biomarker levels will increase during the dying process.

Aim 6 (Pathology): To conduct post-mortem heart and brain autopsy to contextualize and associate tissue-based injury characteristics with physiologic observations. The investigate hypothesize that brain pathology will be related to physiologic observations.

RESEARCH DESIGN This is a prospective observational study of the evaluation of the cerebrovascular physiology of circulatory death.

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS Our sample size is one of convenience. We will enroll 50 participants. Discrete variables will be summarized by frequencies and percentages. Continuous variables will be summarized by mean (SD) or median (IQR) if data are skewed.

Aim 1: The pulse pressure at which MCA-Fv and PCA-Fv cease will be summarized as a median and range across the cohort. The percentage of patients exhibiting absent CBF with a pulse pressure of > 5mmHg will be stated as well. Sub Aim 1b: Random slope and intercepted linear mixed effects models will be used to assess relationships between cerebrovascular and cardiovascular variables during the dying process in humans until circulatory arrest.

Aim 2: The feasibility of data elements collected will be reported by percentage of data elements obtained in each case across the cohort. In each case, a dichotomous (yes/no) reported collection of the data element will be reported. The overall percentage of data elements collected will be reported for each case and across the entire cohort as a numerical measure of feasibility.

Aim 3: Relationships between select variables will be analyzed with random slope, random intercept linear mixed-effects model with continuous predictors (MAP,) as fixed factors and patient as a random factor. Cerebrovascular responses to progressive hypotension (MAP) following WLSM will be determined via random slope and random intercept linear mixed effects models with MAP or pulse pressure as a continuous predictor and patient as a random factor.

Aim 4: Wilcoxon signed-rank tests will be used to evaluate the change in brain biomarker levels during the dying process in humans until circulatory arrest.

Aim 5: Kruskal-Wallis and Dunn's post-hoc correction will be used to assess the relationship between brain pathology and continuous physiologic variables.

Sex Based Analysis: Assessing sex-related differences will encompass an exploratory analysis to inform future hypothesis generation. In our neuromonitoring patients, the proportion of patients has been approximately 60% male and 40% female. The investigators expect a similar ratio of males to females in the current study. Data will be stratified by sex, across all patients and within each study group. Further, for both study groups the investigators will assess differences between males and females by including an interaction term group*sex into our linear mixed models.

PATHOLOGY SUB STUDY

PURPOSE To perform post-mortem pathological examination of nervous system tissue (brain and spinal cord)

HYPOTHESIS The investigators hypothesize that the brain will show histological features correlated with early cessation of blood perfusion such as abnormalities in and around small vessels and in the blood-brain barrier, tissue edema, and markers of early cellular necrosis, and that these changes will not be present, or will be present to a much lesser extent, in the spinal cord of the same individuals.

JUSTIFICATION AND OBJECTIVES Post-mortem brain and spinal cord autopsy will be obtained in patients to provide a tissue correlate and context to the neuromonitoring data. The investigators will evaluate whether two distinct areas of the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord) with different blood supply show the same degree of histopathological changes. Specifically, pathologic examination will be undertaken to provide macroscopic evaluation of the middle and posterior cerebral arteries for signs of vascular pathology (e.g. intravascular thrombi, vasoconstricted state) to provide mechanistic explanations for the anticipated results. Examination will also be undertaken in the regions of anterior and posterior circulation to assess microvascular pathology that could explain the cerebrovascular physiologic results. This will also be compared to the spinal cord which has a different blood supply from the brain. Specifically, the formalin fixed samples will be used for hematoxylin and eosin and special stains to assess for abnormalities in and around small vessels and in the blood-brain barrier, tissue edema, and markers of early cellular necrosis.

RESEARCH DESIGN This single-center prospective post-mortem pathological analysis of patients who underwent WLST will describe the pathologic characteristics of neurological injury in the neurovascular unit.

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS The pathology tissue analysis will be used to draw descriptive analyses pertaining to the macrovascular and microvascular abnormalities present on post-mortem examination. The change in the concentrations of the arterial and cerebral arterio-venous gradients of the brain biomarkers will be analyzed before WLST and immediately following circulatory death using a one-way ANOVA analysis. Comparisons between the pulse pressure at which cerebral hemodynamics, brain oxygenation and neural electrical activity cease will be conducted between patients with an antecedent acquired brain injury versus those without using a Kruskal-Wallis test.

Study Type

Observational

Enrollment (Estimated)

50

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Contact

  • Name: Mypinder Sekhon, MD PhD
  • Phone Number: 6048754111
  • Email: myp@mail.ubc.ca

Study Contact Backup

Study Locations

    • British Columbia
      • Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, V5Z1M9
        • Recruiting
        • Vancouver General Hospital
        • Contact:

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

  • Adult
  • Older Adult

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sampling Method

Non-Probability Sample

Study Population

Critically ill patients who will undergoing palliative measures following prognostication.

Description

Inclusion Criteria:

  • a) Age > 18 years
  • b) anticipated withdrawal of life-sustaining measures (WLSM) within the next 24 hours

Exclusion Criteria:

  • No in-situ arterial line
  • No legal authorized representative
  • Neurological brain death declared

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Cerebral Hemodynamics
Time Frame: Up to 52 weeks
To describe the timing and physiologic relationships between brain perfusion relative to cardiovascular function. Specifically, we will assess the pulse pressure (measured with an in situ radial arterial catheter) at which cerebral hemodynamics cease (measured with transcranial Doppler derived middle [MCA-Fv] and posterior cerebral artery blood flow velocities [PCA-Fv]) following withdrawal of life sustaining measures.
Up to 52 weeks

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Feasibility
Time Frame: Up to 52 weeks
To measure the feasibility of conducting multimodal neuro and cardiac monitoring and data collection during the dying process until circulatory arrest in humans. Specific physiologic variables being collected during the dying process include telemetry, peripheral oximetry, mean arterial pressure monitoring, PCA-Fv & MCA-Fv, jugular venous bulb oximetry, pulmonary artery mixed venous oximetry and regional oxygen saturation (from near infrared spectroscopy). To numerically represent the feasibility of data collection, a dichotomized description (yes/no) will be applied to each data element regarding whether it was successfully collected for each case and the percentage of data elements collected for each case and across the entire cohort will be reported.
Up to 52 weeks
Brain and Systemic Physiology
Time Frame: Up to 52 weeks
To evaluate relationship between mean arterial pressure (mmHg) and brain blood flow velocity (cm/sec) during the dying process in humans until circulatory arrest.
Up to 52 weeks
Oxygen Extraction Fraction
Time Frame: Up to 52 weeks
To evaluate relationship between mean arterial pressure (mmHg) and oxygen extraction fraction (%) during the dying process in humans until circulatory arrest.
Up to 52 weeks
Brain Biomarker
Time Frame: Up to 52 weeks
We will investigate the impact of global brain ischemia during the dying process on brain tissue injury using blood-based brain biomarkers.
Up to 52 weeks

Other Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Pathology
Time Frame: Up to 52 weeks
To perform post-mortem pathological examination of nervous system tissue (brain and spinal cord) and heart in study participants to provide tissue contextualization of the physiologic findings.
Up to 52 weeks

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Mypinder S Sekhon, MD PhD, University of British Columbia

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start (Actual)

June 1, 2023

Primary Completion (Estimated)

June 1, 2026

Study Completion (Estimated)

June 1, 2026

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

October 15, 2023

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

November 11, 2023

First Posted (Actual)

November 13, 2023

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (Estimated)

November 13, 2024

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

November 10, 2024

Last Verified

November 1, 2024

More Information

Terms related to this study

Additional Relevant MeSH Terms

Other Study ID Numbers

  • H23-00172

Plan for Individual participant data (IPD)

Plan to Share Individual Participant Data (IPD)?

UNDECIDED

Drug and device information, study documents

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product

No

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product

No

product manufactured in and exported from the U.S.

No

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

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