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The purpose of this study is to compare blood loss and the number of transfusions received by each patient having coronary bypass surgery. The second purpose is to determine how the level inflammation in patients during and after surgery may affect a patient's response to surgery and the recovery process.
Full description
Off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting (OPCAB) and the use of minimal extracorporeal circulation system (MECC) have both been proposed as alternatives to avoid the harmful effects of conventional cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). However, with the technically more demanding nature of off-pump CABG, the potential short-term benefits of off-pump surgery may not translate into long-term benefits in providing optimal revascularization. In this prospective cohort study, it is our goal to evaluate short term outcomes as demonstrated by blood loss, transfusion need, and systemic inflammatory response during CABG surgery using MECC or conventional CPB or OPCAB.
In addition to the technical challenges posed during off-pump CABG surgery, it is also known that a significant systemic inflammatory response is mounted in patients who undergo conventional CPB. This inflammatory response is a combined effect of 1) the placement of required tubes and lines for connection with the heart/lung machine, 2) hemodilution, and 3) hypothermia. In this study, we will measure levels of tissue inflammation through the use of specialized laboratory tests (C Reactive Protein, C5 complement activation and Interleukin 6), and we will correlate these inflammation levels to the three different cardiopulmonary bypass options. It is our hypothesis that MECC will provide the stable operating environment of conventional CPB and the patient benefits of less blood loss, decreased transfusion rate, and decreased inflammation levels seen in patients with OPCAB.
Statistical Analysis: Multivariable regression models will be used to investigate the association of the MECC pump, conventional CPB versus off-pump with the outcomes controlling for risk factors recognized by the STS associated with post-CABG adverse outcomes) and other clinical and non-clinical factors. The association of each outcome of interest with MECC versus conventional CPB and MECC versus off-pump will be estimated with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). With a cohort of 102 patients (34 in each of three study groups) we will have over 80% power to detect a 71% relative reduction (30% absolute difference) in transfusion rate among CABG patients using a MECC pump as compared to conventional pump patients assuming that 42% of patients undergoing CABG with conventional pump require a transfusion
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Inclusion criteria
-Males and females at least 18 years of age undergoing CABG surgery who are suitable candidates cardiopulmonary bypass.
Exclusion criteria
102 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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