Brain injury and ketamine study (BIKe): a prospective, randomized controlled double blind clinical trial to study the effects of ketamine on Therapy Intensity Level and intracranial pressure in severe traumatic injury patients.

Author:

De Sloovere Veerle Tineke1ORCID,Mebis Liese1,Wouters Pieter1,Grandas Fabian Guïza2,Boonen Eva3,Bourgeois Marc4,Dubois Jasperina5,Ledoux Didier6,Lormans Piet7,Maréchal Hugues8,Hauwaert Emmanuel Van der9,Depreitere Bart1,Meyfroidt Geert1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University Hospitals Leuven: UZ Leuven

2. KU Leuven University Hospitals Leuven: UZ Leuven

3. Algemeen Ziekenhuis Turnhout

4. Algemeen Ziekenhuis Sint-Jan AV: AZ Sint-Jan Brugge AV

5. Jessa Ziekenhuis Campus Virga Jesse: Jessa Ziekenhuis vwz

6. Centre hospitalier universitaire de Liège: Centre hospitalier universitaire de Liege

7. Algemeen Ziekenhuis Delta: AZ Delta vzw

8. Centre Hospitalier Regional de la Citadelle

9. Imeldaziekenhuis: Imelda vzw

Abstract

Abstract Background: In severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), sedatives are often used to control intracranial pressure (ICP), to reduce brain metabolism, to allow for other treatments such as mechanical ventilation or targeted temperature management, or to control paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity. Prolonged sedation is often necessary. The most commonly used sedatives in TBI are propofol and midazolam, often in combination, but both have significant side effects when used at high doses for several days. Ketamine, an N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, provides sedation and analgesia with minimal respiratory depression or haemodynamic instability. However, ketamine carries a US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) precaution regarding its use in patients with pre-anesthetic elevated cerebrospinal fluid pressure, which discourages its use in TBI patients. Several observational studies and two large meta-analyses do not suggest that the use of ketamine as an induction agent or sedative in sedated and mechanically ventilated TBI patients would increase the ICP. Off-label use of ketamine for this indication is increasing worldwide. To date, no prospective randomized clinical trial (RCT) has demonstrated the safety of ketamine in TBI patients. Methods: The Brain Injury and Ketamine (BIKe) study is a prospective multicentre double-blind placebo-controlled RCT, to evaluate the safety, and effect on therapeutic intensity to reduce ICP, of ketamine as an adjunct to a standard sedation regimen in patients with severe TBI. Adult TBI patients, admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU), requiring sedation and ICP monitoring within 72 hours of admission, will be randomized to ketamine or placebo. The study drug will be started within 6 hours of randomization. The dose of the investigational medicinal product (IMP) is 1 mg/kg/hour, by continuous infusion. The IMP will be stopped when the last ICP control sedative is discontinued. Data collection will stop when the patient is discharged from the ICU. All patients will be followed for 6 months post-trauma. The study is powered for the safety endpoint of detecting a clinically relevant increase of two episodes in the median number of episodes of high intracranial pressure episodes per ICU stay. A total of 100 patients are required to meet these objectives. We hypothesize a clinically relevant reduction in the therapeutic intensity level (TIL) score of at least 3 points. Discussion: This study is the first prospective RCT to investigate the safety of ketamine as an adjunct to a standard sedation regimen in TBI patients. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05097261.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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