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Association of Intraoperative Blood Pressure Excursions Below Cerebral Autoregulatory Boundaries With Organ Injury Following Major Noncardiac Surgery (AR-NONCARDIAC)

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University Hospital Basel

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Intraoperative Arterial Hypotension

Treatments

Other: additional perioperative blood sampling
Other: Non-invasive cerebral oximetry monitoring
Other: clinical & telephone assessments
Other: Processed electroencephalogram (pEEG) monitoring
Other: Non-invasive somatic oximetry monitoring

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05336864
2022-00298 am22Wanner;

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aim of study is to investigate the clinical relevance of blood pressure (BP) excursions below cerebral autoregulatory boundaries in major noncardiac surgery. The study seeks to establish a precedent for a personalized definition of intraoperative arterial hypotension based on non-invasive tissue oxygenation measurements. The feasibility of NIRS-based autoregulation monitoring in major noncardiac surgery and the prognostic relevance of BP excursions below the NIRS-derived lower limit of autoregulation (LLA) with regard to major cardiovascular, renal and neurological complications will be investigated.

Full description

Major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) are leading causes of perioperative morbidity and mortality following major noncardiac surgery. Intraoperative arterial hypotension is strongly associated with postoperative morbidity and mortality. However, interventional trials have been unable to demonstrate clinically relevant reductions in the incidence of postoperative MACE, which can potentially be explained by the hitherto lacking consideration of patient-specific autoregulatory boundaries. This is especially problematic considering that the presumed mechanism of hypotension-induced organ injury is hypoperfusion due to transgression of the lower limit of blood flow autoregulation. In other clinical settings, excursions below the autoregulatory threshold have been shown to be superior predictors of adverse events than excursions below absolute blood pressure (BP) thresholds, however, there is a paucity of data in major noncardiac surgery.

This prospective, multicenter cohort observation study aims to investigate the clinical relevance of blood pressure excursions below autoregulatory boundaries and to determine the association of other measures of disturbed intraoperative cerebral autoregulatory function in major noncardiac surgery.

This project will consist of a Main study in which all patients will be enrolled and of substudies on perioperative neurologic injury, tissue perfusion, postoperative hemodynamics, and processed electroencephalogram (EEG), in which selected patients will be enrolled.

Enrollment

650 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

45+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria (All patients):

  • undergoing major noncardiac surgery in general anesthesia will be included. Major noncardiac surgery is defined as:

    • vascular surgery (with the exception of arteriovenous shunt, vein stripping procedures and carotid endarterectomies)
    • intraperitoneal surgery
    • intrathoracic surgery
    • major orthopedic surgery
  • at cardiovascular risk, defined as meeting at least 1 of the following 6 criteria:

    • preoperative NT-proBNP ≥ 200 ng/l

    • history of coronary artery disease

    • history of peripheral vascular disease

    • history of stroke

    • undergoing major vascular surgery, with the exception of arteriovenous shunt, vein stripping procedures and carotid endarterectomies

    • fulfillment of any 3 of the 8 following criteria:

      • undergoing major surgery (intrathoracic, intraperitoneal or suprainguinal vascular surgery)
      • any history of CHF or history of pulmonary edema
      • anamnestic transient ischemic attack (TIA)
      • diabetes under treatment with either oral antidiabetic agent or insulin
      • age > 70 years
      • history of hypertension
      • serum creatinine > 175 mcmol/l or calculated creatinine clearance < 60 l/min/1.73m2 (Cockroft Gault)
      • history of smoking within 2 years of surgery
  • intraoperative continuous invasive blood pressure monitoring indicated due to anesthetic or surgical factors

  • planned surgical time ≥ 90 minutes

  • planned postoperative hospital stay at least 1 night

Additional inclusion criteria for neurologic injury sub-study:

  • Age ≥ 65 years

Exclusion Criteria (All patients):

  • pregnancy (anamnestic)
  • emergent surgery
  • urological surgery
  • renal insufficiency with creatinine clearance < 30 ml/min (Cockroft- Gault equation) or on dialysis
  • inclusion in an interventional clinical trial with any common endpoints: acute kidney injury, perioperative myocardial injury, components of the composite major cardiovascular, renal and neurological complications up to 1 year following surgery (ACS, CHF, coronary revascularization, stroke, new CKD or progression of CKD, new need for renal replacement therapy, mortality), neurological injury, delirium, exception: potential inclusion of subset of patients in RCT investigating the perioperative use of colchicine in major noncardiac surgery (COLCAT study).
  • previously enrolled in this study

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Central trial contact

Patrick M Wanner, Dr. med.; Luzius A Steiner, Prof. Dr. med.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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