Rationale and design of the THIRST Alert feasibility study: a pragmatic, single-centre, parallel-group randomised controlled trial of an interruptive alert for oral fluid restriction in patients treated with intravenous furosemide

Author:

Chen YangORCID,Shah Anoop,Jani YoginiORCID,Higgins Daniel,Saleem Nausheen,Chafer Kris,Sydes Matthew RobertORCID,Asselbergs Folkert W,Lumbers R Thomas

Abstract

IntroductionAcute heart failure (HF) is a major cause of unplanned hospitalisation characterised by excess body water. A restriction in oral fluid intake is commonly imposed on patients as an adjunct to pharmacological therapy with loop diuretics, but there is a lack of evidence from traditional randomised controlled trials (RCTs) to support the safety and effectiveness of this intervention in the acute setting.This study aims to explore the feasibility of using computer alerts within the electronic health record (EHR) system to invite clinical care teams to enrol patients into a pragmatic RCT at the time of clinical decision-making. It will additionally assess the effectiveness of using an alert to help address the clinical research question of whether oral fluid restriction is a safe and effective adjunct to pharmacological therapy for patients admitted with fluid overload.Methods and analysisTHIRST (Randomised ControlledTrial within the electronicHealth record of anInterruptive alert displaying a fluidRestrictionSuggestion in patients with the treatableTrait of congestion) Alert is a single-centre, parallel-group, open-label pragmatic RCT embedded in the EHR system that will be conducted as a feasibility study at an National Health Service (NHS) hospital in London. The clinical care team will be invited to enrol suitable patients in the study using a point-of-care alert with a target sample size of 50 patients. Enrolled patients will then be randomised to either restricted or unrestricted oral fluid intake. Two primary outcomes will be explored (1) the proportion of eligible patients enrolled in the study and (2) the mean difference in oral fluid intake between randomised groups. A series of secondary outcomes are specified to evaluate the effectiveness of the alert, adherence to the randomised treatment allocation and the quality of data generated from routine care, relevant to the outcomes of interest.Ethics and disseminationThis study was approved by Riverside Research Ethics Committee (Ref: 22/LO/0889) and will be published on completion.Trial registration numberNCT05869656.

Funder

UCLH Biomedical Research Centre

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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