key: cord-0004670-x22q1f21 authors: Pottecher, Julien; Noll, Eric; Borel, Marie; Audibert, Gérard; Gette, Sébastien; Meyer, Christian; Gaertner, Elisabeth; Legros, Vincent; Carapito, Raphaël; Uring-Lambert, Béatrice; Sauleau, Erik; Land, Walter G.; Bahram, Seiamak; Meyer, Alain; Geny, Bernard; Diemunsch, Pierre title: Protocol for TRAUMADORNASE: a prospective, randomized, multicentre, double-blinded, placebo-controlled clinical trial of aerosolized dornase alfa to reduce the incidence of moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia in ventilated trauma patients date: 2020-03-18 journal: Trials DOI: 10.1186/s13063-020-4141-6 sha: 0c05d8b73a5d20dba42f4b0235fb7840a72bbad6 doc_id: 4670 cord_uid: x22q1f21 BACKGROUND: Acute respiratory distress syndrome continues to drive significant morbidity and mortality after severe trauma. The incidence of trauma-induced, moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia, according to the Berlin definition, could be as high as 45%. Its pathophysiology includes the release of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), which propagate tissue injuries by triggering neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). NETs include a DNA backbone coated with cytoplasmic proteins, which drive pulmonary cytotoxic effects. The structure of NETs and many DAMPs includes double-stranded DNA, which prevents their neutralization by plasma. Dornase alfa is a US Food and Drug Administration-approved recombinant DNase, which cleaves extracellular DNA and may therefore break up the backbone of NETs and DAMPs. Aerosolized dornase alfa was shown to reduce trauma-induced lung injury in experimental models and to improve arterial oxygenation in ventilated patients. METHODS: TRAUMADORNASE will be an institution-led, multicentre, double-blinded, placebo-controlled randomized trial in ventilated trauma patients. The primary trial objective is to demonstrate a reduction in the incidence of moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia in severe trauma patients during the first 7 days from 45% to 30% by providing aerosolized dornase alfa as compared to placebo. The secondary objectives are to demonstrate an improvement in lung function and a reduction in morbidity and mortality. Randomization of 250 patients per treatment arm will be carried out through a secure, web-based system. Statistical analyses will include a descriptive step and an inferential step using fully Bayesian techniques. The study was approved by both the Agence Nationale de la Sécurité du Médicament et des Produits de Santé (ANSM, on 5 October 2018) and a National Institutional Review Board (CPP, on 6 November 2018). Participant recruitment began in March 2019. Results will be published in international peer-reviewed medical journals. DISCUSSION: If early administration of inhaled dornase alfa actually reduces the incidence of moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia in patients with severe trauma, this new therapeutic strategy may be easily implemented in many clinical trauma care settings. This treatment may facilitate ventilator weaning, reduce the burden of trauma-induced lung inflammation and facilitate recovery and rehabilitation in severe trauma patients. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03368092. Registered on 11 December 2017. Aerogen (Ireland) will provide nebulizers to study centres at an estimated value of 28k€. After validation from its Scientific Committee, the TRAUMADORNASE study is supported by a 300k€ grant from the French Ministry of Health (PHRCI-2017-S09). Severe trauma remains a major socio-economic burden worldwide [1, 2] . Indeed, it is the third cause of fatality overall, the first cause of fatality and invalidity in the 16-45 age group and the first cause of disabilityadjusted life years (DALYs). Aside from civilian and military trauma cases, terrorist attacks have added new threats [3] . While the first peak of trauma-associated mortality happens within the very first hours from exsanguination and severe central nervous system injuries, secondary deaths are triggered by multi-organ failure (MOF) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in the intensive care unit (ICU) [4] . The taxonomy of ARDS was recently refined by the last Berlin definition [5] , which also distinguished three levels of increasing hypoxaemia severity (mild/moderate/ severe) based on the ratio of partial arterial oxygen tension (PaO 2 ) over inspired oxygen fraction (FiO 2 ). Patients who develop moderate-to-severe ARDS in the ICU have a worse prognosis compared to mild ARDS patients, including increased mortality rates (48% vs. 29%), impaired functional recovery, compromised quality of life and cognitive dysfunction [6] . Severe trauma definitely remains a significant risk factor for hypoxaemia, implicating both direct and indirect lung injuries [7] . Notwithstanding improvements in prehospital care, resuscitation and mechanical ventilation, the incidence of hypoxaemia in trauma patients has remained consistently high during the last 30 years [8] [9] [10] [11] . In the most severely injured trauma patients (Injury Severity Score (ISS) [12] above 15) requiring blood transfusion, the incidence of hypoxaemia may exceed 40%. Indeed, a recent analysis of the PROMMTT registry underlines that the incidence of moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia could be as high as 45% [13] . In trauma patients, ARDS increases the duration of mechanical ventilation, ICU and hospital lengths of stay, incidence of ventilation-acquired pneumonias, healthcare-associated costs and mortality [14] . Pathophysiology of trauma-associated hypoxaemia and acute respiratory distress syndrome As previously stated [7] , severe trauma may contribute to hypoxaemia by both direct injuries (lung contusion, aspiration) and indirect injuries (non-thoracic trauma, musculoskeletal injuries, haemorrhagic shock, transfusionassociated acute lung injury [15, 16] ). Whatever the mechanism implicated, inflammation is a key player [17] [18] [19] . Indeed, tissue injury triggers a massive and short-lived release of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) [20] , which bind both Toll-like receptors (TLRs) [21] and receptors for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) [22, 23] , which recruit and activate neutrophils, resulting in a widespread systemic inflammatory response [24] . The molecular structure of DAMPs is diverse but the most potent are made of double-stranded DNA [25] , either fully (e.g. mitochondrial DNA [26] [27] [28] ) or partly (e.g. nucleosomes [29] , high mobility group box-1 (HMGB1), heat shock proteins (HSP)). Once bound to neutrophils, DAMPs induce profound conformational changes in these cells (NETosis), which trigger both non-self pathogen killing [30] and self tissue injury [22, 31] . Indeed, NETosis refers to the release of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), composed of a backbone (decondensed chromatin fibres) coated with antimicrobial granular and cytoplasmic proteins, such as myeloperoxidase, neutrophil elastase (NE) and αdefensins [32, 33] . The detrimental effects of excessive NET release are particularly important to ARDS, because NETs can expand more easily in the pulmonary alveoli, causing extensive lung injury [33] and hypoxaemia. Moreover, while unbound NE is usually rapidly inactivated when released into plasma, DNA-bound NE is protected from neutralization by plasma [34] . Double-stranded DNA thus constitutes the backbone of both DAMPs and NETs, and prevents NETs from plasma neutralization. Extracellular DNA is physiologically broken up by endogenous deoxyribonucleases (DNases [33, 35] ), which may become overwhelmed by a massive influx of both DAMPs and NETs. This is exacerbated as the activity of endogenous DNases is reduced in severe trauma patients (0.059 ± 0.0033 U/ml) compared to healthy controls (0.174 ± 0.031 U/ml; p < 0.0001 [36] ). However, an FDA-approved recombinant DNase has been commercially available since 1994 (dornase alfa, Pulmozyme; Roche, Basel, Switzerland and Genentech, San Francisco, CA, USA) and prescribed for the treatment of pulmonary exacerbations in cystic fibrosis patients. As dornase alfa is usually administered via the intratracheal route (aerosols), its biological actions and pharmacokinetic properties could be an excellent prerequisite for a clinical breakthrough in trauma-induced hypoxaemia. Indeed, dornase alfa was shown to reduce trauma-induced lung injury in mice [37] , to fight against sepsis-induced ARDS [38, 39] and to reduce mechanical ventilation-induced lung injury [40] , which are traditional "second hits" for lung damage in ventilated trauma patients. In a small, randomized clinical trial, aerosolized dornase alfa was also shown to improve oxygenation in mechanically ventilated ICU patients with lobar atelectasis [41] . The primary objective of the TRAUMADORNASE study is to demonstrate a reduction in the incidence of moderateto-severe hypoxaemia from 45% to 30% in severe trauma patients during the first 7 ICU days by providing aerosolized dornase alfa once during the first 2 ICU days as compared to equivalent provision of placebo (NaCl 0.9%). The secondary objectives are to demonstrate, using aerosolized dornase alfa as compared to placebo, an improvement in static lung compliance, a reduction in mechanical ventilation duration or an increase in ventilation-free ICU days, a reduction in the length of ICU stay, a reduction in the hospital length of stay, a reduction in the incidence of multi-organ failure, a reduction in the incidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) and a reduction in mortality at day 30. This will be an investigator-initiated, institution-led, multicentre, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, superiority, randomized trial in ventilated, trauma ICU patients. Randomization will be carried out through a secure web-based randomization system, stratified by the centre and the presence of severe traumatic brain injury (Glasgow Coma Score < 9 on scene). The study will be conducted in seven French participating hospitals, both university-affiliated and non-universityaffiliated. Inclusion criteria will be checked before inclusion in the study. The inclusion criteria are as follows: The exclusion criteria are as follows: Pregnancy or breast-feeding Opposition from the patient or his/her relatives Protected major (Guardianship) Contraindication to the use of dornase alfa Known intolerance to dornase alfa Patient whose life expectancy is less than 24 h, according to the treating physician "Do not resuscitate" order Who will take informed consent? {26a} Inclusion will be feasible after patient approval, relative approval or emergency consent procedure (according to French law [42] ). Subsequent confirmation of consent will be obtained from the relatives and from the patient as soon as possible. The consent forms are available from the corresponding author on request. After primary haemostasis and emergent surgical interventions, patients will be randomized in the ICU within 6 h. In the case of emergent surgical intervention before ICU admission, a maximum delay of 18 h will be tolerated from hospital admission (trauma bay) to study drug administration. Day 0 will be considered the day of ICU admission. Additional consent will be required for the collection of biological specimens in ancillary studies, which will be stored for a maximum duration of 15 years. The comparator will be normal saline (NaCl 0.9%, 2.5 ml, administered through the Aerogen solo device). NaCl is neutral regarding DAMPs, NETs and occurrence of either hypoxaemia or ARDS, and therefore is considered a placebo. Treatment with either dornase alfa or placebo will be administered using aerosol (Aerogen solo) in the ventilation circuit once per day (average treatment length: 7 min) for the first 2 days. The Aerogen device was shown to optimize dornase alfa deposition in the distal lung airways [43, 44] . Dornase alfa has an excellent safety profile and aerosolized NaCl 0.9% has a neutral effect on lung physiology. The variables under study will be gathered every day and recorded on the electronic clinical research form (CleanWeb; Telemedicine Technologies S.A.S., Boulogne Billancourt, France). For safety purposes, patient variables will be closely monitored before, during and within the first postadministration hour: lowest SpO 2 , maximal value and maximal increase in peak inspiratory airway pressure, maximal value and maximal increase in plateau airway pressure, extreme values of heart rate and mean arterial pressure, skin erythema, urticaria and variations in central temperature exceeding 1°C. During the first 7 days, at least one blood gas analysis and chest X-ray will be performed every day at 8:00 a.m. to compute the primary endpoint: presence or absence of ARDS and severity of hypoxaemia according to the Berlin definition. Additional blood gas analysis will be allowed and the worst daily PaO 2 /FiO 2 ratio will be considered. On days 0, 3 and 5, additional blood samples (6 ml on each day) will be drawn into EDTA tubes, centrifuged and stored (− 80°C) for subsequent analysis of DAMPs (mitochondrial DNA by qPCR; HMGB1, HSP70 and sRAGE by ELISA) at the end of enrolment. Whole blood samples will be drawn (days 0, 3 and 5) for extemporaneous quantification of NETs on fresh blood using a flow cytometric assay [45] in patients at the Strasbourg centre. In the case of an adverse event following treatment administration (desaturation, bronchospasm, anaphylactic reaction), treatment will be immediately discontinued and the second treatment dose will not be given on day 1. In each centre, boxes containing both full and empty treatment vials will be returned to the pharmacy responsible for clinical studies. For every included patient, a sheet will be completed (date, hour, nurse in charge) and signed for every study treatment preparation, administration and clinical surveillance. For safety purposes, patient variables will be closely monitored before, during and within the first postadministration hour: lowest SpO 2 , maximal value and maximal increase in peak inspiratory airway pressure, maximal value and maximal increase in plateau airway pressure, extreme values of heart rate and mean arterial pressure, skin erythema, urticaria and variations in central temperature exceeding 1°C. At least one blood gas analysis and chest X-ray will be performed every day at 8:00 a.m. to compute the primary endpoint: presence or absence of ARDS and severity of hypoxaemia according to the Berlin definition. Additional blood gas analysis will be allowed and the worst daily PaO 2 /FiO 2 ratio will be taken into account. Daily care for the included patients will be protocolized according to good clinical practices, especially concerning respiratory care (semi-recumbent position, protective mechanical ventilation (6-8 ml/kg predicted body weight), PEEP > 5 cmH 2 O, plateau pressure < 30 cmH 2 O, close tracheal cuff pressure monitoring, early enteral feeding (500 ml on day 1), glucose control and protocolized sedation based on both CPOT and RASS scores [46] ). Adherence to guidelines will be checked in every centre for every patient. Patients will be followed until day 30 for the record of study outcomes. Every concomitant care will be allowed except aerosols during study drug administration. Post-trial care is not planned. Patients who suffer harm from trial participation will be cared for in the intensive care unit. Should prejudice linked to study participation occur, financial compensation will be provided by the insurance (Société Hospitalière d'Assurances Mutuelles-SHAM, 18 rue Edouard Rochet, 69,372 Lyon Cedex 08, France; contract number: 143.380) contracted by the promotor (Hôpitaux Universitaires de Strasbourg). At 6 months, the respiratory status will be assessed using the modified MRC dyspnoea questionnaire [47, 48] and a chest X-ray. The primary endpoint will be the incidence of moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia (PaO 2 /FiO 2 < 200, according to the Berlin definition [5] ) in severe trauma patients (ISS > 15) during the first 7 ICU days. The PaO 2 /FiO 2 ratio will be computed at least once daily (8: 00 a.m.) together with the supine chest X-ray and the worst daily PaO 2 /FiO 2 value will be taken into account to define hypoxaemia severity. In ARDS patients, the severity of hypoxaemia allows for its classification according to the Berlin definition and is strongly associated with mortality, length of recovery and quality of life [6, 7] . The following secondary endpoints will be recorded: Static lung compliance (ml/cmH 2 O) (measured at least once daily at 8:00 a.m. during the first 7 days) Duration of mechanical ventilation (h) from ICU admission to first extubation success (> 48 h without reintubation) Length of ICU stay (h) Length of stay in the hospital (days) Incidence of multi-organ failure (a SOFA score of 3 or more in at least two organ systems [49] ), assessed daily during the first 7 days Incidence of VAP according to both the American Thoracic Society (ATS) [50] and the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) [51] definitions, assessed daily during the first 7 days The effects of dornase alfa and normal saline will be assessed according to the plasma concentrations of DAMPs (mitochondrial DNA, HMGB-1, HSP70, sRAGE) and NETs (Strasbourg centre only) divided into quartiles at day 0, day 3 and day 5. It is anticipated that trauma patients with the highest blood concentrations of either DAMPs or NETs will develop the most severe complications (including hypoxaemia and ARDS). The time course of DAMP and NET blood concentrations will also be analysed according to treatment group to unveil a potential quicker decrease in patients randomized in the dornase alfa group. The total duration of participation in the study will be 30 days. The forecast study duration is 36 months from first to last patient recruitment (Table 1) . The sample size was determined to be 250 subjects per arm (i.e. 500 subjects in total). Dornase alfa is expected to reduce the incidence of moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia from 0.45 to 0.30. Considering a reasonable standard deviation of 0.03, and using Bayesian techniques [52] , 200 subjects per arm were estimated to show a difference of more than 0.12 (instead of the expected 0.15). Clinical examination includes physical examination (auscultation of the chest, central body temperature, positive end-expiratory pressure and inspired oxygen fraction levels) and recording of Utstein criteria [49] b Diagnostic tests include arterial blood gases, chest X-ray, leukocyte and platelet counts, creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, bilirubin and quantitative lung bacteriologic samplings (bronchoalveolar lavage fluid or protected specimen brush) in the case of suspected lung infection c Blood withdrawal: 6 ml of blood on day 0, day 3 and day 5 d Study treatment will be given on day 0 and day 1 Assuming 25% loss to follow-up, this number was increased to 250 subjects per arm, although these subjects will not be replaced. Patients will be recruited in seven French participating hospitals, both university-affiliated and non-universityaffiliated and admitting severe trauma patients: Taken as a whole, more than 3500 patients per year fulfil the inclusion criteria, allowing for an inclusion ratio of one patient included out of seven patients admitted to one of the participating centres. Randomization will be conducted over a dedicated, password-protected, SSL-encrypted website (CleanWeb; Telemedicine Technologies S.A.S.) to allow immediate and concealed allocation. Allocation will also be stratified by centre and the presence of severe traumatic brain injury (Glasgow Coma Score < 9 on scene). The experimental study drug and placebo will be provided in identical boxes, allowing double-blind administration. The logistics of the trial fluid distribution to each of the seven participating centres that are anticipated to be recruiting will be coordinated by the pharmacy of the coordinating centre (Hôpitaux Universitaires de Strasbourg). The allocation sequence will be computer-generated (CleanWeb; Telemedicine Technologies S.A.S.). Patients will be enrolled by registered investigators, who will also assign patients to a treatment consisting of either dornase alfa or placebo. Trial participants, care providers, outcome assessors and data analysts will remain blinded after assignment to interventions, until the final analysis. Unblinding is permissible whenever an adverse event occurs, via immediate request to the poison centre of the study coordinator hospital (Hôpitaux Universitaires de Strasbourg) 24 h per day and 365 days per year. The procedure for revealing a participant's allocated intervention during the trial includes an explicit mention in the patient record. Clinical research associates will ensure that patient inclusion, data collection, registry and rapport are in line with the protocol, and that the study is conducted in accordance with the Good Clinical Practice guidelines. Furthermore, clinical research associates will check the following variables: patient initials, date of birth, sex, signed consent form, eligibility criteria, date of randomization, treatment assignment, adverse events and study endpoints. The data monitoring committee is institution-based and independent from potential industrial sponsors. A dedicated card will be given to any included patient and participation in the TRAUMADORNASE trial will be explicitly mentioned during transfer to another ward or hospital during handovers. Data will be collected in each centre by clinical data technicians on an electronic case report form (CleanWeb; Telemedicine Technologies S.A.S.) using double password-protected computers. Pre-specified lists, range of values and drop-down menus in the electronic case report form will facilitate data entry and prevent writing errors. Study documents will be deidentified, stored in each recruitment centre and kept for at least 15 years in a locked, secure office, according to French law. All personnel involved in data analysis will be masked. Only the principal investigators and the statisticians will have access to the final data set. People with direct access to the data will take all necessary precautions to maintain confidentiality. All data collected during the study will be rendered anonymous. Only initials and inclusion number will be registered. Plans for collection, laboratory evaluation and storage of biological specimens for genetic or molecular analysis in this trial/future use {33} On days 0, 3 and 5, additional blood samples (6 ml on each day) will be drawn into EDTA tubes, centrifuged and stored (− 80°C) for subsequent analysis of DAMPs (mitochondrial DNA by qPCR; HMGB1, HSP70 and sRAGE by ELISA) at the end of enrolment. In patients included in the Strasbourg centre, whole blood samples will be drawn (days 0, 3 and 5) for extemporaneous quantification of NETs on fresh blood using a flow cytometric assay [45] . The remaining biological specimens will be stored in 0.5-ml aliquots at "Biomax" biobank, Statistical analyses will include a descriptive step and an inferential step using fully Bayesian techniques. The estimates will use Markov chains to Monte Carlo integrations (McMC), choosing prior distributions to be nearly conjugated situations. Unless the diagnoses for convergence give clues to the contrary, we will use three Markov chains with separated starting points, a burn-in of 100,000 for each chain and 100,000 more iterations with a thinning of 25 for building a total sample of 12, 000 iterations on which the Monte Carlo integrations are used to retrieve characteristics of posterior distributions. The analyses will be carried out using R software (with ad hoc packages) and OpenBUGS. Sensitivity analyses will be systematically conducted, considering three scenarios with different priors: a default non-informative prior (e.g. Jeffreys prior), then an optimist prior and, finally, a pessimist prior. In the descriptive step, all of the variables collected will be summarized: number and frequency for qualitative variables (ordinal and categorical) and minimum, quantiles (2.5, 25, 50, 75 and 97.5), maximum, mean and standard deviation for quantitative variables (discrete and continuous). For variables gathered over time, these descriptions will be provided globally and at each time. This description will be enriched by inference to extrapolate the observed quantities on the sample. For quantitative variables, we will assume a normal likelihood combined with a normal prior on the mean (mean 0 and variance 100) and γ on the precision (inverse of variance) with parameters 0.0005 and 0.005, and therefore mean 0.1 and variance 20. For binary variables (for which one proportion needs to be estimated), we will assume a binomial likelihood and a β prior on the proportion (Jeffreys prior with parameters 0.5 and 0.5, and thus mean 0.5 and variance 0.125). For categorical variables with more than two categories, we will assume a categorical likelihood together with a Dirichlet prior (Jeffreys prior with all parameters at 0.5). The aim of this study is to show that the frequency of moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia is lower in the dornase alpha group than in the placebo group. The main variable is then dichotomous "moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia yes/no", modelled in a logistic mixed regression. We will assume that this variable is Bernoulli distributed with parameter π. The logit of this parameter (linear predictor) is additively written as: where: α 0 is a grand mean, with mean 0 normal prior (the variance in this normal is 6, corresponding to a low informative prior) I(g i = 1) is a dummy covariate coded for the group of subject i (1 for the dornase alpha group and 0 for the placebo group)the prior on the parameter of this covariate is the same normal as that for the grand mean β i is a (random) subject effect, on which is assumed a normal prior with mean 0 and low variance (e.g. 10) Because the linear predictor is on the logit scale, the probability for moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia will be obtained by monitoring the back-transformation of the logit. This regression model without covariates except group will be completed for taking into account potential confounding variables. In the model, the entire set of these variables will be added and, secondly, selected using stochastic search variable selection (SSVS) [53] . In such a model, the prior distribution on each parameter is a mixture of two mean 0 normal distributions, one with low variance and the other with high variance: if the posterior weight on this second normal is strongly around 0, then the prior on the parameter is essentially driven by a normal distribution whose mean is centred on 0; this is the clue for a "non-significant" parameter. The secondary analyses will be conducted as the main analysis with a regressive model, testing the difference of a parameter between the two groups. Only the likelihood model will be changed to take into account the type of variable studied: γ distribution for continuous variables such as length of stay and duration of ventilation. Dichotomous variables such as 30-day mortality will be studied with logistic regression. No statistical procedure for replacing missing values will be used. All variables and subjects will be considered in the descriptive analyses, but, for inference, 20% missing data or more will result in rejection of the variable or individual. An interim analysis will be performed after inclusion of the first 250 patients. These preliminary data will be available to the data safety and monitoring board (see later for details), which will have the ability to stop the trial for either futility or harm. Analyses will be performed in intention to treat. To verify the impact of possible deviations from the protocol, these analyses will be supplemented by an analysis per protocol. Subgroup analyses will be conducted according to the Glasgow Coma Scale on site (score either ≤ 8 or > 9). Methods in analysis to handle protocol non-adherence and any statistical methods to handle missing data {20c} No statistical procedure for replacing missing values will be used. All variables and subjects will be considered in the descriptive analyses, but, for inference, 20% missing data or more will result in rejection of the variable or individual. Plans to give access to the full protocol, participant-level data and statistical code {31c} The protocol is available on the ClinicalTrials.gov website (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03368092?term= traumadornase&draw=2&rank=1). Study documents will be de-identified, stored in each recruitment centre and kept for at least 15 years in a locked, secure office, according to French law. All personnel involved in data analysis will be masked. Only the principal investigators and the statisticians will have access to the final data set. Composition of the data monitoring committee, its role and reporting structure {21a} The data safety and monitoring board (DSMB) will include Dr Laure Peyro-Saint Paul (drug monitoring specialist), Prof. Bernard Asselain (methodologist and biostatistician), Prof. Catherine Paugam-Burtz (anaesthesiologist and intensive care physician), Prof. Samir Jaber (anaesthesiologist and intensive care physician) and Prof. Boris Jung (intensive care physician). The DSMB, independent from the study sponsor and principal investigator, including three intensive care physicians, one methodologist and one drug safety specialist, will meet after inclusion of the first 20 patients to assess the safety of dornase alfa administration in ventilated trauma patients. The safety variables under study are detailed in the "Interventions" section. The DSMB will meet subsequently after further incremental inclusions of 100 patients. The DSMB charter was signed by all of its members. Adverse events and unintended effects of the trial intervention or trial conduct will be declared to the promotor within 24 h of occurrence. Moreover, the DSMB will meet after inclusion of the first 20 patients to assess the safety of dornase alfa administration in ventilated trauma patients. The safety variables under study are detailed in the following. For safety purposes, patient variables will be closely monitored before, during and within the first post-administration hour: lowest SpO 2 , maximal value and maximal increase in peak inspiratory airway pressure, maximal value and maximal increase in plateau airway pressure, extreme values of heart rate and mean arterial pressure, skin erythema, urticaria and variations in central temperature exceeding 1°C. The DSMB will meet subsequently after further incremental inclusions of 100 patients. In every centre, an audit will be performed by the Direction de la Recherche Clinique des Hôpitaux Universitaires de Strasbourg after inclusion of the first patient, then yearly and after enrolment of the last patient. Plans for communicating important protocol amendments to relevant parties (e.g. trial participants, ethical committees) {25} Important protocol modifications will be communicated to investigators, IRB and trial registries via e-mail. Every protocol amendment will be first submitted to the IRB and, after validation, transmitted to investigating centres, which will acknowledge receipt. The results of the study will be released to the participating physicians, referring physicians and medical community no later than 1 year after the completion of the trial, through presentation at scientific conferences and publication in peer-reviewed journals. Eligible authors will meet all four requirements of the ICMJE guidelines: Substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work; or the acquisition, analysis or interpretation of data for the work Drafting the work or revising it critically for important intellectual content Final approval of the version to be published Agreement to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved To the best of our knowledge, TRAUMADORNASE is the first large-scale study to evaluate the usefulness of inhaled dornase alfa to reduce the incidence of moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia in a population of severe trauma patients, who will also benefit from other lung-protective measures. The benefits are expected to include a reduction in both duration of mechanical ventilation and stay in the ICU, lower costs of hospital stay, fewer days on mechanical ventilation and a reduction in the selective pressure on multidrug-resistant bacteria. In order to keep management practices as standardized as possible, we decided to limit the number of investigating centres to seven university-affiliated and non university-affiliated hospitals, all of which are recognized in the field of trauma care and treat more than 50 severe trauma patients per year. These centres belong to the TraumaBase network (www.traumabase.eu), which promotes multicentre clinical research on trauma and ensures consistent recording of clinical data according to the TraumaBase registry guidelines. These seven centres also share the same standards of care and, except for Pitié-Salpêtrière centre, belong to the same region of France (Grand Est). From a translational point of view, the study will challenge the hypothesis that breaking up the doublestranded DNA backbone of both DAMPs and NETs with dornase alfa may reduce inflammation and NETinduced epithelial and endothelial cell injuries in the lungs of trauma patients. Dornase alfa is a long-standingFDA-approved mucolytic agent used in cystic fibrosis patients. Its safety profile and limited side effects make it an appropriate candidate to curb DAMP-induced, NET-mediated inflammation. As we will use high-end vibrating mesh nebulizers, which provide excellent lung deposition and drug bioavailability, we expect that dornase alfa will be deposited within the depth of the lung parenchyma, where it may be the most useful. The incidence of moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia is the primary study endpoint. A 45% basal incidence of moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia may appear overstated to some experts, but it must be underlined that only severe trauma patients will be included and that a 45% incidence was reported in the last randomized PROMTT trial [13] , in the era of damage-control resuscitation [54] . A 15% absolute reduction seems ambitious for a single intervention. However, previous studies using dornase alfa in animal lung injury models and in ventilated patients suffering atelectasis demonstrated striking results [35, [38] [39] [40] [41] 55] . Because fluid loading regimens and transfusion strategies are based on local written protocols, they may act as potential confounding variables. However, this will be controlled by the stratification of the randomization at the centre level and adjustment of statistical analyses in cases of differences between groups. In conclusion, this trial is the first multicentre, randomized controlled, double-blinded study adequately powered to test the hypothesis that aerosolized dornase alfa reduces the incidence of moderate-to-severe hypoxaemia in mechanically ventilated severe trauma patients. Protocol version 8.0 was approved by the National Institutional Review Board on 6 November 2018. The study started on 10 March 2019 and is expected to last until September 2022 (36-month inclusion period plus 6month participation period). After validation from its Scientific Committee, the TRAUMADORNASE study was funded by the French Ministry of Health. Fédération Hospitalo-Universitaire OMICARE, Centre de Recherche d INSERM UMR_S 1158 Neurophysiologie Respiratoire Expérimentale et Clinique, AP-HP, Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière Charles Foix, Département d'Anesthésie Réanimation Réanimation Chirurgicale et Traumatologique, SAMU 51, 45 rue Cognacq-Jay, 51092 Reims, France. 10 Hôpitaux Universitaires de Strasbourg, Nouvel Hôpital Civil, Laboratoire Central d'Immunologie, 1 Place de l'Hôpital, 67091 Strasbourg Cedex Service de Physiologie et d'Explorations Fonctionnelles Disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) for 291 diseases and injuries in 21 regions, 1990-2010: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study The toll of death and disability from traumatic injury in the United States-the "neglected disease" of modern society, still neglected after 50 years ICU specialists facing terrorist attack: the Nice experience Distribution of the probability of survival is a strategic issue for randomized trials in critically ill patients Acute respiratory distress syndrome: the Berlin Definition Functional disability 5 years after acute respiratory distress syndrome Acute respiratory distress syndrome Incidence of adult respiratory distress syndrome in trauma patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis over a period of three decades Clinical predictors of early acute respiratory distress syndrome in trauma patients The acute respiratory distress syndrome following isolated severe traumatic brain injury Heterogeneous phenotypes of acute respiratory distress syndrome after major trauma The Injury Severity Score revisited Application of the Berlin definition in PROMMTT patients: the impact of resuscitation on the incidence of hypoxemia Acute lung injury and the acute respiratory distress syndrome in the injured patient Potential contribution of mitochondrial (mt) DNA damage associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) in transfusion products to the development of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) after multiple transfusions Transfusion-related acute lung injury: the work of DAMPs A genomic storm in critically injured humans Sterile inflammation: sensing and reacting to damage Microbial recognition and danger signals in sepsis and trauma Plasma levels of danger-associated molecular patterns are associated with immune suppression in trauma patients Toll-like receptors in the vascular system: sensing the dangers within The HMGB1/RAGE axis triggers neutrophil-mediated injury amplification following necrosis The HMGB1-RAGE inflammatory pathway: implications for brain injury-induced pulmonary dysfunction Trauma Surgery 3. Advances and future directions for management of trauma patients with musculoskeletal injuries Circulating mitochondrial DAMPs cause inflammatory responses to injury Clinical immunology: culprits with evolutionary ties Elevated levels of plasma mitochondrial DNA DAMPs are linked to clinical outcome in severely injured human subjects Plasma mitochondrial DNA levels in patients with trauma and severe sepsis: time course and the association with clinical status Circulating histones are mediators of trauma-associated lung injury Neutrophil recruitment and function in health and inflammation Neutrophil extracellular traps directly induce epithelial and endothelial cell death: a predominant role of histones Role of neutrophil extracellular traps following injury Neutrophil extracellular traps in pulmonary diseases: too much of a good thing Molecular mechanisms of NET formation and degradation revealed by intravital imaging in the liver vasculature DNaseI protects against Paraquat-induced acute lung injury and pulmonary fibrosis mediated by mitochondrial DNA Reduced deoxyribonuclease enzyme activity in response to high postinjury mitochondrial DNA concentration provides a therapeutic target for systemic inflammatory response syndrome Targeting neutrophils to prevent malaria-associated acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome in mice Mitochondrial DNA damage associated molecular patterns in ventilatorassociated pneumonia: prevention and reversal by intratracheal DNase I Mitochondrial DNA damage-associated molecular patterns mediate a feedforward cycle of bacteria-induced vascular injury in perfused rat lungs Mechanical ventilation induces neutrophil extracellular trap formation Inhaled dornase alfa (Pulmozyme) as a noninvasive treatment of atelectasis in mechanically ventilated patients French legal approach to clinical research Aerosol delivery of recombinant human DNase I: in vitro comparison of a vibrating-mesh nebulizer with a jet nebulizer A technical feasibility study of dornase alfa delivery with eFlow Flow cytometric assay for direct quantification of neutrophil extracellular traps in blood samples Hospital-acquired pneumonia in ICU Evaluation of clinical methods for rating dyspnea The body-mass index, airflow obstruction, dyspnea, and exercise capacity index in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease Reversal of trauma-induced coagulopathy using first-line coagulation factor concentrates or fresh frozen plasma (RETIC): a single-centre, parallelgroup, open-label, randomised trial Infectious Diseases Society of America. Guidelines for the management of adults with hospital-acquired, ventilatorassociated, and healthcare-associated pneumonia Complications of mechanical ventilation-the CDC's new surveillance paradigm Bayesian and mixed Bayesian/likelihood criteria for sample size determination Variable selection via Gibbs sampling The prospective, observational, multicenter, major trauma transfusion (PROMMTT) study: comparative effectiveness of a time-varying treatment with competing risks Local dornase alfa treatment reduces NETs-induced airway obstruction during severe RSV infection Publisher's Note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations The authors are greatly indebted to Barbara Jung and Mathias Candusso, clinical research associates, for writing the study draft. The authors thank Jo-Ann Elicia West, MSc, an independent consultant in Cartigny L'Epinay, France, for providing editorial support, which was funded by Hôpitaux Universitaires Strasbourg, Direction de la Recherche Clinique et des Innovations, Strasbourg, France in accordance with Good Publication Practice (GPP3) guidelines (http://www.ismpp.org/gpp3). JP conceived the study, coordinated its design, drafted and wrote the manuscript. JP, EN, MB, GA, SG, CM, EG, VL, RC, BU-L, ES, WGL, SB, AM, BG and PD read and were involved in critical appraisal and revision of the manuscript. ES provided statistical expertise. All authors approved the final manuscript prior to submission. Aerogen (Ireland) will provide nebulizers to the study centres (estimated value: €28,000). After validation from its Scientific Committee, the TRAUMADORNASE study is supported by a €300,000 grant from the French Ministry of Health (PHRCI-2017-S09). Funders will have no role in the study's design, collection, management, analysis and interpretation of data, writing of the report and the decision to submit the report for publication conception or in the data analysis. Name and contact information for the trial sponsor: Ms Nathalie PORTIER, French Ministry of Health, GIRCI Est, CHU de Dijon, 14, rue Paul Gaffarel, BP 77908, 21079 Dijon Cedex, France. Only the principal investigators, the DSMB and the statisticians will have access to the final data set. The data sets used and analysed during the current study will be available from the corresponding author on reasonable request, after publication of the main core article. The clinical trial will adhere to the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki and to the Clinical Trials Directive 2001/20/EC of the European Parliament on the approximation of the laws, regulations and administrative provisions of the Member States relating to the implementation of Good Clinical Practices in the conduct of clinical trials on medicinal products for human use. Ethical aspects of this research project have been approved by the French Agence Nationale de la Sécurité du Médicament et des Produits de Santé (ANSM, on 5 October 2018) and a National Institutional Review Board (CPP, on 6 November 2018), which covers all participant sites. The trial will be monitored by the research monitoring officers of Strasbourg University Hospital. Significant changes to the protocol will be submitted for approbation by the National Institutional Review Board. Prior consent of the subject will not be possible in most cases due to traumatic brain injury, haemorrhagic shock or prehospital sedation requirements. Therefore, consent of the subject's legally acceptable representative will be requested. A consent form specifically designed for the subject's legally acceptable representative will be provided with documented approval or favourable opinion of the institutional review board in order to protect the rights, safety and well-being of the subject and to ensure compliance with any applicable regulatory requirements. Consent to participation in the study by the patient's relatives will be solicited, according to the requirements of the ethics committee. In cases where neither patient consent nor relative's consent is available within the 6-h inclusion timeline, the subject will be included following the emergency consent procedure (according to French law [42] , Code de la Santé Publique, Article L1122-1). Subsequent confirmation of consent will be obtained from the relatives and the patient as soon as possible. Although it is not anticipated, owing to the trial design, publication of any personal information about a patient will require her/his consent. The authors declare that they have no competing interests. 1