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Cardiac Output Response to Vasopressin Infusion In Abdominal Surgery Patients Under Mechanical Ventilation (CORVaso)

U

University Hospital, Clermont-Ferrand

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

General Anesthesia
Major Abdominal Surgery
Vasopressin Infusion
Mechanical Ventilation

Treatments

Drug: Vasopressin, Arginine

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04935814
CORVaso / RBHP 2021 GODET 2

Details and patient eligibility

About

In this study, the investigators propose to explore the hemodynamic variations induced by vasopressin and its influence on cardiac output, mean systemic pressure, and venous return resistance measured through cardiopulmonary interactions, according to the approach proposed by Guyton, in patients undergoing major abdominal surgeries.

Full description

Maintaining hemodynamic stability is one of the main objectives of the anesthesiologist or the intensivist, either in the ICU or the OR. This consists of optimizing cardiac output to ensure satisfactory systemic perfusion during the peri-operative period or the ICU stay. The occurrence of oxygen debt (mismatch between oxygen consumption and transport) and/or tissue hypoperfusion are key factors in the development of organ failure. Numerous studies have shown in recent years that individualized hemodynamic optimization (cardiac output and organ perfusion pressure) reduces the risk of postoperative and ICU morbidity and mortality.

Monitoring of cardiac output and stroke volume is a valuable and essential aid in determining the therapies to be used for this optimization, whether it involves volume expansion or the use of a vasopressor or even inotropic agent.

Several vasopressor therapies have been available to date. Norepinephrine is currently the reference in the treatment of vasoplegic shock states, but also in the operating room during major surgery or in fragile patients. Other molecules are currently available and are used in a disparate manner, according to the habits of each practitioner, sometimes outside regulatory rules, not following international recommendations concerning the pathology in question: adrenaline, dopamine, phenylephrine, terlipressin...

Vasopressin (D-arginine-D-vasopressin) is an endogenous hormone synthesized by the hypothalamus (peptide composed of 9 amino acids) which has an antidiuretic renal action through its V2 receptor but also a vasoconstriction activity through its V1a receptor, at the level of the smooth muscles of the vascular wall. It also participates in the stimulation of catecholamine secretion by the adrenal medulla. Vasopressin is commercially available under the name "argipressin". It is currently indicated as an adjunct to other vasopressors such as norepinephrine in refractory septic shock to maintain satisfactory hemodynamic stability.

However, its vasoconstrictive and hemodynamic effects, including its influence on cardiac output, have never been studied to date and to the knowledge of investigators. In particular, there are no studies showing the influence of this molecule on mean systemic pressure and venous return resistance, which are fundamental determinants of its impact on left heart function and thus on cardiac output.

In this study, the investigators propose to explore the hemodynamic variations induced by vasopressin and its influence on cardiac output, mean systemic pressure, and venous return resistance measured through cardiopulmonary interactions, according to the approach proposed by Guyton.

Enrollment

20 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adults above 18
  • Planned for a major abdominal surgery under general anesthesia
  • Under mechanical ventilation
  • Presence of a central venous and arterial lines allowing transpulmonary thermodilution cardiac output measurement
  • Patient's consent with a social insurance

Exclusion criteria

  • Do not consent to participate
  • History of heart attack, arteriopathy or aneurysm
  • Contraindication to use transpulmonary thermodilution to measure cardiac output :
  • coagulopathy
  • cardiac arrythmia
  • presence of pace-maker or defibrillator
  • severe valvulopathy
  • Patients with Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (according to Berlin criteria)
  • History of arterial hypertension (treated or not)
  • History of seizure, chronic headache, asthma or heart failure
  • Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction (LVEF) < 45% or right ventricular dysfunction
  • History of pulmonary lobectomy or surgery
  • History of restrictive or obstructive pulmonary disease
  • Body Mass Index (BMI) < 15 or > 40 kg/m²
  • Pregnancy
  • Known allergy to vasopressin
  • Patients under protection of justice (guardianship, curators...)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Sequential Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

20 participants in 1 patient group

Continuous vasopressin infusion
Experimental group
Description:
After general anesthesia, patients will receive a continuous infusion of vasopressin in order to improve mean arterial pressure by 20 mmHg.
Treatment:
Drug: Vasopressin, Arginine

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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