Abstract

BackgroundDelirium is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality rates in elderly hospitalised patients, and a growing problem due to increase in life expectancy. Implementation of standardised non-pharmacological delirium prevention strategies is challenging and adherence remains low. Pharmacological delirium prevention with haloperidol, currently the drug of choice for delirium, seems promising. However, the generalisability of randomised controlled trial results is questionable since studies have only been performed in selected postoperative hip-surgery and intensive care unit patient populations. We therefore present the design of the multicenter, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial on early pharmacological intervention to prevent delirium: haloperidol prophylaxis in older emergency department patients (The HARPOON study).Methods/DesignIn six Dutch hospitals, at-risk patients aged 70 years or older acutely admitted through the emergency department for general medicine and surgical specialties are randomised (n = 390) for treatment with prophylactic haloperidol 1 mg or placebo twice daily for a maximum of seven consecutive days. Primary outcome measure is the incidence of in-hospital delirium within seven days of start of the study intervention, diagnosed with the Confusion Assessment Method, and the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition criteria for delirium. Secondary outcome measures include delirium severity and duration assessed with the Delirium Rating Scale Revised 98; number of delirium-free days; adverse events; hospital length-of-stay; all-cause mortality; new institutionalisation; (Instrumental) Activities of Daily Living assessed with the Katz Index of ADL, and Lawton IADL scale; cognitive function assessed with the Six-item Cognitive Impairment Test, and the Dutch short form Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly. Patients will be contacted by telephone three and six months post-discharge to collect data on cognitive- and physical function, home residency, all-cause hospital admissions, and all-cause mortality.DiscussionThe HARPOON study will provide relevant information on the efficacy and safety of prophylactic haloperidol treatment for in-hospital delirium and its effects on relevant clinical outcomes in elderly at-risk medical and surgical patients.Trial registrationEudraCT Number: 201100476215; ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01530308; Dutch Clinical Trial Registry: NTR3207

Highlights

  • Delirium is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality rates in elderly hospitalised patients, and a growing problem due to increase in life expectancy

  • Kaplan-Meier estimates will be used to display survival probability within 6 months after hospital discharge for patients with and without diagnosed in-hospital delirium. This stratified randomised, placebo-controlled, doubleblind clinical trial studies the efficacy and safety of haloperidol prophylaxis for prevention of delirium in older at-risk patients aged 70 years or over who are acutely admitted to the hospital through the emergency department (ED) for general medicine or surgical specialties, because generalisability of existing study results from well-designed RCTs in this field are limited to postoperative hipsurgery [14] and intensive care unit (ICU) patients [13]

  • Because delirium severity and duration amongst other things were chosen as secondary outcome parameters, a study intervention-period was selected that is long enough to identify delirium developing under prophylactic haloperidol treatment

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Summary

Introduction

Delirium is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality rates in elderly hospitalised patients, and a growing problem due to increase in life expectancy. Because of the associated healthcare and economic burden, multicomponent non-pharmacological intervention strategies targeting delirium risk factors in the hospital setting have been introduced. They are effective in reducing delirium incidence in elderly general medicine and surgical patients [8,9], their effectiveness seems largely to depend on protocol adherence [10] which may be low due to high staff workload. The effect of haloperidol prophylaxis on in-hospital delirium development and post-discharge outcomes in an older general medicine and surgical patient population has not been studied yet

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