Design and implementation of Pharyngeal electrical Stimulation for early de-cannulation in TRACheotomized (PHAST-TRAC) stroke patients with neurogenic dysphagia: a prospective randomized single-blinded interventional study

Rainer Dziewas*, Satish Mistry, Shaheen Hamdy, Jens Minnerup, Ingeborg Van Der Tweel, Wolf Schäbitz, Philip M Bath, PHAST-TRAC Investigators

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Rationale: Ongoing dysphagia in stroke patients weaned from mechanical ventilation often requires long-term tracheotomy to protect the airway from aspiration. In a recently reported single-centre pilot study, a significantly larger proportion (75%) of tracheotomized dysphagic stroke patients regained sufficient control of airway management allowing tracheotomy tube removal (decannulation) 24–72 h after pharyngeal electrical stimulation (PES) compared to controls who received standard therapy over the same time period (20%). Aim: To assess the safety and efficacy of PES in accelerating dysphagia rehabilitation and enabling decannulation of tracheotomized stroke patients. Design: International multi-centre prospective randomized controlled single-blind trial in approximately 126 ICU patients (the 90th percentile of the calculated maximum sample size). Study outcomes: Primary outcome: proportion of stroke patients considered safe for decannulation 24–72 h after PES compared to control patients who do not receive PES. Key secondary outcomes focus on: dysphagia severity, decannulation rates, decannulation rate after a repeat PES treatment in patients persistently dysphagic after an initial PES treatment, stroke severity, duration of ICU-stay, occurrence of adverse events including pneumonia and need for recannulation over 30 days or until hospital discharge (if earlier). Discussion: Dysphagia and related airway complications are reported as one of the main reasons for stroke patients remaining tracheotomized once successfully weaned from ventilation. This study will evaluate if PES can improve airway safety sufficiently enough to allow earlier tracheotomy tube removal.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)430-437
Number of pages8
JournalInternational Journal of Stroke
Volume12
Issue number4
Early online date2 Nov 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

Keywords

  • clinical trial protocol
  • fibreoptic endoscopic evaluation of swallowing
  • mechanical ventilation
  • Stroke
  • tracheotomy decannulation

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