PRESS RELEASE: EMBARGOED: Winner Announced for the Australian Clinical Trials Alliance 2023 Trial of the Year Award

EMBARGOED until MONDAY 27 NOVEMBER 2023 7PM

Winner Announced for the Australian Clinical Trials Alliance 2023 Trial of the Year Award

The Australian Clinical Trials Alliance (ACTA) is thrilled to announce the winner of the 2023 ACTA Trial of the Year Award. The winning trial: Treatment of Invasively Ventilated Adults with Early Mobilisation Activity and Mobilisation (TEAM) has this year taken out the prestigious award. The Trial of the Year Award celebrates the vital role trials have in advancing clinical practice and saving or improving patients’ lives every year.

TEAM is a randomised, multicentre, multinational and multidisciplinary randomised controlled trial, funded by the NHMRC and the New Zealand HRC. Established in 2017, the trial provided evidence for the provision of rehabilitation and mobilisation of critically ill, mechanically ventilated patients. Immobilisation contributes substantially to the development of muscle weakness and wasting, factors that are linked with longer hospital stays, higher post-discharge mortality, and poor long-term functional recovery. More than forty percent of mechanically ventilated patients in ICU experience acquired weakness. The trial addressed a crucial evidence gap regarding this widespread ICU-related condition.

Early rehabilitation and mobilisation are a complex intervention that has been proposed to reduce ICU-acquired weakness and poor outcomes associated with it. Several single centre pilot studies have found a benefit, including a reduced length of hospital stay, improved physical function at hospital discharge and improved cognitive function and HRQoL at 6-months. At least seven international clinical practice guidelines (SCCM USA, NICE UK, ESICM Europe) have advocated for early rehabilitation and mobilisation, despite the lack of evidence from a well conducted Phase III trial.

The award-winning trial led by Chief Investigator Professor Carol Hodgson, oversaw a team of Australian researchers and clinicians, in collaboration with several international partners. The multidisciplinary trial obtained key leadership from a team of medical doctors, nurses, physiotherapists, consumers, health economists, project managers and statisticians. Few other trials have included a multidisciplinary team to deliver a complex intervention in intensive care.

The investigating team worked with several hospitals in different countries, including the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Ireland, Brazil, and Europe, and included 750 critically ill patients to compare the effects of early physical therapy to standard care. The trial found no difference between early activity and standard care in terms of the number of days patients were alive and out of the hospital after 180 days. The study found that patients who received early activity were more likely to experience adverse events such as heart rhythm issues, low blood pressure and low oxygen levels.

Professor Hodgson highlighted that eight international guidelines recommend early mobilisation or rehabilitation in critically ill patients receiving mechanical ventilation, without evidence for the optimal dose.

“The TEAM trial, led by a multidisciplinary team questioned the dose of mobilisation in ICU,” said Professor Hodgson.

“We found that a high dose of mobilisation increased adverse events without improving days alive and at home compared to usual care mobilisation.

The findings of the trial now influence how medical professionals take care of critically ill patients in ICUs around the world. It suggests that activity and mobilisation delivered as usual care in Australia is a safer approach than a much higher and more intensive amount.

In addition, millions of dollars per year are now being saved in healthcare costs across Australia and New Zealand alone.

“This finding saves the healthcare system approximately $110 million per annum and reduces the risk of harm to critically ill patients,” Professor Hodgson added.

ACTA Deputy Chair Professor Chris Reid said, “Prof Hodgson and her team have made a direct and significant impact for patient outcomes and the financial burden on the healthcare system, and their findings have the potential to be replicated in healthcare settings across the world”.

“Our role at ACTA is to bring together those who are involved in the nation’s investigator-led clinical trials, and these Awards are a way to celebrate and recognise their extraordinary efforts for better patient outcomes, added Professor Reid.

Full detail on the awards, winners and finalists are available on request.

2023 ACTA Awards:
• Trial of the Year Award Winner: TEAM Treatment of Invasively Ventilated Adults with Early Mobilisation Activity and Mobilisation (TEAM) is a randomised, multicentre, multinational and multidisciplinary randomised controlled trial.
• Trial of the Year Award Finalist: SuDDICU Australia The effect of selective decontamination of the digestive tract on hospital mortality in critically ill patients receiving mechanical ventilation.
• Trial of the Year Award Finalist: Effect of audit and feedback on rates and musculoskeletal diagnostic imaging requests by Australian general practitioners Investigation into the effectiveness of audit and feedback, used at a national level, for reducing requests for 11 overused musculoskeletal diagnostic imaging tests by Australian GPs compared with no intervention control. A factorial cluster randomised controlled trial.
• Excellence in Trials Statistics Award Winner: ASCOT
Australasian COVID-19 Trial (ASCOT) is an adaptive platform trial for non-critically ill patients hospitalised with COVID-19. The investigators tested different levels of anticoagulation (blood thinning) and a novel antiviral agent called nafamostat.
• Excellence in Trials Statistics Award Finalist: CRISTAL A cluster-randomised, crossover, noninferiority trial of aspirin compared to low-molecular-weight heparin for venous thromboembolism prophylaxis in hip or knee arthroplasty.
• Consumer Involvement Award Winner: ACCELERATE
ACCELERATE Plus Trial: a stepped-wedge cluster randomised controlled trial to assess the effect of improving patient assessment and clinical communication on patient adverse events.
• Health Economics Alongside Trials Winner: TARGET-D
Economic evaluation of the Target-D Platform to match depression management to severity prognosis in primary care.

About Australian Clinical Trials Alliance
Australian Clinical Trials Alliance (ACTA) is the national peak body supporting and representing networks of clinician-researchers conducting investigator-initiated clinical trials, maintaining clinical quality registries, and operating clinical trial coordinating centres within the Australian healthcare system. ACTA brings together more than 80 clinical trials networks, coordinating centres and clinical quality registries working towards better health through best evidence. Collectively, ACTA’s represents a community of more than 10,000 researchers, clinicians, nurses, volunteers, and many others working within the Australian healthcare system to improve outcomes and the quality of care.

ACTA gratefully acknowledges the enormous contributions of the ACTA Members and operational funding from the Australian Government Medical Research Future Fund.

Media Contacts:

Name: Dino CercarelliCompany: Australian Clinical Trials AllianceEmail: Phone: 0400 667 322

About Australian Clinical Trials Alliance

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Australian Clinical Trials Alliance is the national peak body supporting and representing networks of clinician-researchers conducting investigator-initiated clinical trials, maintaining clinical quality registries, and operating clinical trial coordinating centres within the Australian healthcare system. Until ACTA, there was no single, coordinated mechanism to connect clinical researchers with governments, healthcare policymakers and consumers on issues that impact the conduct of investigator-led clinical trials across the Australian health system.