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Effects of a Goal-directed Hemodynamic Therapy Driven by ECOM on Morbidity and Mortality After Cardiac Surgery? (ECOMIII)

C

Caen University Hospital

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Coronary Surgery With Cardiopulmonary Bypass

Treatments

Behavioral: hemodynamic optimization strategy driven by the ECOM
Behavioral: standard management strategy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT01535716
2011-A01210-41

Details and patient eligibility

About

Goal-directed hemodynamic and fluid optimizations are shown to be a key factor of the medical care during anesthesia.According to medical literature, goal-directed fluid and hemodynamic optimizations are more efficient when based on the dynamic parameters than when based on the statics ones, and the major dynamic criteria is the cardiac output. Unfortunately, transpulmonary thermodilution, the device considered as "The gold standard" to evaluate cardiac output is associated with many complications.Furthermore, devices commercialized in the past decade were not able to replace the transpulmonary thermodilution.

As all monitoring devices aren't reliable enough to be widely used in practice they are left aside in benefits of the clinical evaluation. Even though, hemodynamic optimization based on the analysis of several clinical parameters seems to guarantee good cares thanks to a favorable benefits/risks balance, it could be improved by new plug and play mini-invasive systems.

In the investigators opinion, the ECOM system seems able to provide a monitoring tool which responds to all the expectations of a modern hemodynamic monitoring device. It uses a well known technique, the bioimpedance. The investigators suppose this device should be more efficient than the one that has been used before. Indeed, as the system is build on the endotracheal tube, it comes closer to the aorta, where all the measures are made, and the recorded signal should be less affected by the passage through the surrounding tissues.

This randomized and controlled trial will study Patients scheduled for elective coronary surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass.

The purpose of this trial is to evaluate the benefits of an intraoperative goal-directed hemodynamic therapy based on the ECOM cardiac output measure on mortality and major postoperative cardiac morbidity after coronary surgery, when compared with a standard management strategy.

Patients will be allocated into control and ECOM groups, of 50 peoples each. The standard management strategy, applied to the control group, will be set and led by the attending anesthetist, based on the analysis of further clinical parameters. The ECOM Group will face the hemodynamic optimization strategy led by the ECOM evaluation of cardiac output and stroke volume variation.

The main hypothesis is that the hemodynamic strategy led by the ECOM cardiac output measure will reduce mortality and morbidity after cardiac surgery.

Enrollment

100 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Any man or woman
  • Over 18 year-old
  • After obtaining written informed consent
  • Scheduled for elective coronary surgery with CPB

Exclusion criteria

  • Emergency surgery (< 24h)
  • Combined cardiac surgery
  • Patients < 18 years-old and/or unable to give informed consent
  • Patients who refuse to give informed consent
  • Pregnancy
  • PVC allergy

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Factorial Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

100 participants in 2 patient groups

ECOM group
Experimental group
Description:
50 Patients scheduled for elective coronary surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass
Treatment:
Behavioral: hemodynamic optimization strategy driven by the ECOM
standard management group
Active Comparator group
Description:
50 Patients scheduled for elective coronary surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass
Treatment:
Behavioral: standard management strategy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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