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Driving Pressure Guided Ventilation Versus Conventional Lung Protective Strategy in Morbid Obese Patients Undergoing Laparoscopic Bariatric Surgery

T

Tanta University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Driving Pressure

Treatments

Procedure: driving pressure guided ventilation
Procedure: Conventional protective lung strategy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04861168
Driving pressure ventilation

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will be conducted to evaluate the effect of driving pressure guided ventilation compared with conventional protective lung ventilation during laparoscopic bariatric surgeries in morbid obese patients.

  • the primary outcome: Intraoperative oxygenation measured by the arterial partial pressure of oxygen (PaO2).
  • the secondary outcome: incidence of early postoperative pulmonary complications e.g., postoperative hypoxia, the need for supplementary oxygen, atelectasis, barotrauma, and respiratory failure.

Full description

Protective mechanical ventilation during anesthesia aims at minimizing lung injury and has been associated to a decrease in postoperative pulmonary complications (PPCs). Conventional protective ventilation strategy is consisted of the use of a low tidal volume (VT) and fixed moderate positive end expiratory pressure (peep). However, low-VT may result in the reduction of the functional volume of the lung manifested as lung collapse. Another potential consequence of lung collapse is the impairment in ventilatory efficiency.

Bariatric surgery is proven to achieve significant and sustained weight loss in the morbidly obese. Major weight loss can lead to partial/complete resolution of a range of conditions including, diabetes mellitus, ischemic heart disease, and hypertension.

Obese patients undergoing general anesthesia and mechanical ventilation during abdominal and bariatric surgeries commonly have a higher incidence of postoperative pulmonary complications (PPCs), due to factors such as decreasing oxygen reserve, declining functional residual capacity, and reducing lung compliance. And also pneumoperitoneum aggravates pulmonary atelectasis caused by mechanical ventilation, especially in obese patients.

Driving pressure (DP) which is the difference between the airway pressure at the end of inspiration (plateau pressure, (Ppl) and PEEP was first introduced by Amato et al in 2015 in their meta-analy¬sis study for ARDS patients. The authors suggested that driving pressure is the stronger predictor of mortality as compared with low VT and Ppl.

Several retrospec¬tive and prospective studies confirmed the importance of driving pressure in ARDS pa¬tients and during general anesthesia without differentiation between obese and nonobese patients .only one retrospective study showed that driving pressure was not associated with mortality in obese-ARDS patients. we hypothesize that these results may be different in obese patients having healthy lungs.

Enrollment

60 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 60 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • sixty patients have a BMI 40-50 kg/m2, ASA physical status III, aged between 18 and 60 years, scheduled to undergo laparoscopic bariatric surgeries.

Exclusion criteria

  • patient refusal to participate in the study.
  • Patients had a recent history of severe respiratory disease and previous major pulmonary surgeries.
  • patients who are contraindicated with application of PEEP (high intracranial pressure, bronchopleural fistula, hypovolemic shock, right ventricular failure).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

60 participants in 2 patient groups

Driving pressure guided ventilation
Experimental group
Description:
Patients will be mechanically ventilated with driving pressure guided ventilation with VT 6-8 ml /kg of predicted body weight, and after recruitment we will return to the baseline PEEP 5 cmH2O that will be increased by 2 cmH2O until reaching the lowest possible driving pressure for every patient. Each PEEP level will be applied for 10 respiratory cycles and DP will be calculated at the last cycle.
Treatment:
Procedure: driving pressure guided ventilation
Conventional protective lung strategy
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients will be mechanically ventilated with conventional protective lung strategy with VT 6-8 ml /kg of predicted body weight, after recruitment, we will return to the baseline PEEP 5 cmH2O and will be maintained until the end of surgery.
Treatment:
Procedure: Conventional protective lung strategy

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Mohamed Elbehairy

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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