PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT More than half of the >10 million patients who are mechanically ventilated for acute respiratory failure throughout the world each year experience delirium, a brain dysfunction syndrome characterized by acute disturbances in attention, awareness, and cognition. Delirium is a risk factor for numerous adverse outcomes, including delayed liberation from mechanical ventilation, increased health care costs, increased mortality, and—for those who survive—long-term disability and persistent cognitive impairment. Up to one third of survivors of acute respiratory failure are affected by long-term cognitive impairment, the severity of which is similar to that caused by traumatic brain injury or Alzheimer’s Disease. The pathophysiology of delirium during acute respiratory failure remains poorly understood, and effective therapies have yet to be identified. Thus, avoidance of risk factors is key to improving outcomes. One of the common risk factors for delirium during acute respiratory failure is exposure to sedating medications, which are often necessary when managing mechanically ventilated patients. When choosing whether and how to sedate a patient with acute respiratory failure, a clinician would ideally use information about risk for sedative-associated delirium, the duration of which predicts long-term cognitive impairment. The identification and quantification of risk for sedative- associated delirium during acute respiratory failure would allow clinicians to personalize decision-making regarding sedation in the intensive care unit (ICU), making efforts to avoid sedation (or avoid specific sedatives) when managing those patients at high risk for sedative-associated delirium. Such an approach to personalized sedation would lead to less delirium and to improved patient-centered outcomes. Thus, we plan in this NRSA project to test the central hypothesis that risk for sedative-associated delirium during acute respiratory failure can be quantified in a clinical prediction rule based on patient characteristics and treatment factors. To test this hypothesis, we will accomplish two specific aims. First, we use existing data collected during the multicenter, prospective BRAIN-ICU cohort study to derive a clinical prediction rule that uses readily available patient characteristics and treatment factors to predict sedative-associated delirium among adults with acute respiratory failure (Aim 1). Next, we will validate the sedative-associated delirium clinical prediction rule both internally to correct estimates for optimism (Aim 2A) and externally, assessing calibration and discrimination in two ongoing, NHLBI-funded prospective cohort studies (Aim 2B). During this project, the applicant’s mentors and training program will provide him with expert training in clinical research methodology and cognitive assessments and outcomes, and he will cultivate the skills necessary for a career as an independent clinical researcher in the field of cri...