SBIR-STTR Award

New Quantitative Monitor for Continuous Assessment of Icu Sedation (Optised)
Award last edited on: 9/8/14

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NIGMS
Total Award Amount
$357,616
Award Phase
1
Solicitation Topic Code
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Principal Investigator
Tatjana Zikov

Company Information

NeuroWave Systems Inc

2490 Lee Boulevard Suite 300
Cleveland Heights, OH 44118
   (216) 361-1591
   info@neurowavesystems.com
   www.neurowavesystems.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 11
County: Cuyahoga

Phase I

Contract Number: 1R43GM108264-01
Start Date: 9/16/13    Completed: 9/15/14
Phase I year
2013
Phase I Amount
$357,616
Our overall objective is to develop a novel monitor, OptiSED, for the precise and continuous assessment of sedation in the ICU. The specific Phase I goals of this 12-month project are to: 1) develop an objective score for continuous monitoring of sedation status in ICU patients, and 2) perform an initial assessment of its validity. This scor will be integrated in the OptiSED monitor, which will allow delivery of patient-customized ICU sedation and address the unmet need for an effective sedation management in critically ill. The OptiSED ICU sedation score will be based on the advanced signal processing of EEG signals and will closely agree with the extensively validated and widely-used Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale (RASS). The rationale for developing OptiSED is to facilitate wider implementation of clinical ICU sedation protocols shown to significantly improve outcomes in critically ill and reduce care costs. These protocols minimize the adverse effects of poorly controlled sedation by aiming to administer the sedation therapy more accurately and according to patient-specific needs. To achieve this goal, frequently repeated assessments of the patient's level of sedation are essential. Currently, there are a number of clinical sedation scores, among which the RASS has shown excellent validity and inter-rater reliability in broad range of ICU patients. However, these subjective scores provide only sporadic patient assessments and require significant increase in resources for their frequent administration. Also, they cannot be applied to certain subgroups of ICU patients. Thus, "despite strong recommendations by the Society of Critical Care Medicine that sedation protocols be used to manage sedation in the ICU, survey data suggest their actual usage has been disappointingly low". The OptiSED would alleviate the above limitations of clinical sedation scores by providing an automated, readily available measurement of ICU sedation depth. This Phase I will focus on the development and initial validation of the EEG-based OptiSED score for ICU sedation. Significant portion of this 12-month program will be dedicated to clinical work to be performed at a leading national clinical research institution, where ICU-specific data will be collected in two stages to derive the OptiSED score and perform its initial validation. To derive the OptiSED score, we will adapt our proven and patented signal processing methods for real-time EEG analysis, which are integrated in our commercial intraoperative brain monitor - NeuroSENSE(R). The specific aims of this Phase I project are: (1) To carry out a pilot observational clinical study in ICU patients undergoing sedation and acquire continuous EEG signals and clinical RASS sedation scores at predefined time intervals; (2) To derive the "objective" EEG-based OptiSED score to match the clinical RASS observations by adapting our proven wavelet-based EEG analysis using ICU- specific data collected in (1); (3) To preliminary validate the OptiSED score by acquiring additional clinical data (paired EEGs and RASS) from ICU patients and using known validation methods for clinical instruments.

Public Health Relevance Statement:


Public Health Relevance:
Virtually every patient admitted to the ICU is administered sedation therapy to enable treatment delivery and provide comfort necessary for healing. Adequate sedation in the ICU remains a challenge since there is no means for its direct assessment, while both under- and over-sedation have harmful consequences for these vulnerable patients. The overall goal of this project is to develop and validate the EEG-based OptiSED monitor for continuous and objective measurement of ICU sedation levels, so as to enable wider implementation of sedation protocols shown to lead to significant improvements in patient outcomes and care costs.

NIH Spending Category:
Clinical Research

Project Terms:
Academic Medical Centers; Address; Adverse effects; Agitation; Algorithms; Anesthesia procedures; base; Beds; Brain; Caring; Clinical; Clinical Data; Clinical Research; computerized data processing; cost; Cost Savings; Critical Care; Critical Illness; Data; Development; Devices; Discrimination (Psychology); Dose; Electrodes; Electroencephalography; Ensure; Europe; Goals; Healed; healing; improved; Institution; instrument; Japan; Lead; Legal patent; Marketing; Measurement; Measures; Medicine; Methodology; Methods; Metric; Monitor; novel; Ohio; Operative Surgical Procedures; Outcome; patient population; Patients; Performance; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Phase; Population; programs; Protocols documentation; public health relevance; Recommendation; Resources; Sedation procedure; Signal Transduction; Societies; Staging; State Interests; Subgroup; success; Surveys; technological innovation; Technology; Time; time interval; Training; Validation; validation studies; Work

Phase II

Contract Number: ----------
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase II year
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Phase II Amount
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