Disclaimer: This site aggregates publicly available data from official government sources (FDA, ClinicalTrials.gov, PubMed, SEC EDGAR, NMPA) for general reference only. It does NOT constitute medical advice, diagnosis, treatment recommendations, or investment advice.

Clinical Trial

Non-Invasive Ventilation Interfaces and Nasal Pressure Injury in Preterm Infants

NCT: NCT07521410 · NOT_YET_RECRUITING

NCT IDNCT07521410
StatusNOT_YET_RECRUITING
Start Date2026-04-20
Completion2026-10-24

Brief Summary

The goal of this randomized controlled clinical trial is to learn whether different non-invasive ventilation interfaces can prevent medical device-related nasal pressure injury in preterm infants receiving respiratory support in a neonatal intensive care unit. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Do different non-invasive ventilation interfaces affect how often nasal pressure injury develops? * Do these interfaces affect the severity of nasal pressure injury and the condition of the nasal skin? Researchers will compare three types of non-invasive ventilation interfaces (binasal prong, nasal cannula, and nasal mask) to see if one method is more effective in reducing nasal pressure injury. Participants will: * Be randomly assigned to one of three groups (binasal prong, nasal cannula, or nasal mask) * Receive non-invasive ventilation support using the assigned interface for at least 4 days * Have their nasal skin assessed every 12 hours for 96 hours using standardized scales * Continue to receive routine care in the neonatal intensive care unit

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Non-Invasive Ventilation Interfaces and Nasal Pressure Injury in Preterm Infants?

Non-Invasive Ventilation Interfaces and Nasal Pressure Injury in Preterm Infants is a clinical trial registered under NCT07521410. Current status: NOT_YET_RECRUITING.

What is the status of NCT07521410?

The current status of NCT07521410 (Non-Invasive Ventilation Interfaces and Nasal Pressure Injury in Preterm Infants) is: NOT_YET_RECRUITING.

When did Non-Invasive Ventilation Interfaces and Nasal Pressure Injury in Preterm Infants start?

Non-Invasive Ventilation Interfaces and Nasal Pressure Injury in Preterm Infants started on 2026-04-20.

Official Source

View on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov API. For the most current status, refer to the official record.