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Implementation of Fluid Strategies Using Real-time Bioelectrical Analyzer in Surgical Intensive Care Unit (SICU)

S

Seoul St. Mary's Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Fluid Loss
Fluid Overload

Treatments

Drug: Active fluid management with BIA monitoring
Drug: Conventional fluid management without BIA monitoring

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Precise assessment of postoperative volume status is important to administrate optimal fluid management. Bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) which measures the body composition using electric character. Extracellular water (ECW) ratio by BIA represented as the ratio of ECW to total body water (TBW) and is known to reflect the hydration status. Based on this, we aimed to determine whether aggressive fluid control using ECW ratio could improve clinical outcomes through a single blind, randomized controlled trial.

Full description

Critically ill patients admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU) after surgery have commonly experienced a large amount of wide organ injury and profuse bleeding resulting in vessel damage during surgery. Severe systemic inflammatory reactions and pathophysiological stress could consequently occur in these patients. For patients in an acute postoperative phase, it is important to maintain organ perfusion by correcting hemodynamic instability through fluid resuscitation.

Bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA), a non-invasive method, is useful for quantitatively measuring body composition such as body fat and muscle mass. It is also useful for evaluating volume status based on resistance and reactance of cells known to have different electrical conductivity according to biological characteristics of body composition. In our previous study using BIA, the results showed that changes in ECW ratio after surgery were related to conventional parameters of overhydrated status such as daily fluid balance or capillary leak index (CLI). In addition, overhydration with value of ECW ratio above 0.390 on 3rd postoperative day appeared to be a risk factor for postoperative morbidity and mortality.

Herein, we aim to set the ECW ratio as a guideline for postoperative volume status and confirm a hypothesis that active intervention with fluid management to control the ECW ratio by BIA could lower clinical outcomes in patients with fluid imbalance through a prospective randomized controlled study.

Enrollment

200 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients admitted to the surgical ICU after surgery under general anesthesia regardless of the type of surgery
  • Patients who showed abnormal range of baseline ECW ratio by BIA (less than 0.390 or more than 0.405) that measured at the time of ICU admission

Exclusion criteria

  • aged under 18 years
  • underwent surgery under local or regional anesthesia
  • pregnant
  • had bone fixation or underwent limb amputation
  • had any prosthetic medical devices such as pacemaker or metallic intravascular device
  • stayed in ICU for less than 48 hours
  • readmitted within 48 hours after ICU discharge
  • diagnosed with renal failure and receiving renal replacement therapy
  • underwent extracorporeal membrane oxygenation treatment before surgery
  • agreed for do-not-resuscitate

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

200 participants in 2 patient groups

Active fluid management with BIA monitoring
Experimental group
Description:
For assessment of fluid status, a commercial portable BIA device (InBody M20®, InBody Corp., Seoul, Korea) was measured. Baseline BIA data were collected at the time of ICU admission, and BIA measurements were performed daily for 3days for all participants. The participants in active fluid management with BIA monitoring arm received fluid supplementation targeting specific range of ECW ratio by BIA (0.390-0.406). If a patient with dehydrated status indicated by the ECW ratio was less than 0.390, a bolus infusion was performed using 250ml of crystalloid fluid (PlasmaLyte). If a patient with overhydrated status indicated by the ECW ratio was more than 0.406, 10mg of furosemide was administered. Changes in the ECW ratio were measured at one hour after initial intervention for fluid adjustment, and the investigators determined whether additional intervention was needed according to results of changes. These processes continued until the ECW ratio was within the normal range (0.390-0.406).
Treatment:
Drug: Active fluid management with BIA monitoring
Conventional fluid management without BIA monitoring
Experimental group
Description:
For assessment of fluid status, a commercial portable BIA device with 5-kilohertz, 50-kilohertz, and 250-kilohertz alternating current (InBody M20®, InBody Corp., Seoul, Korea) was measured. Baseline BIA data were collected at the time of ICU admission. Thereafter, BIA measurements were performed daily for 3 days for all participants. The participants in conventional fluid management without BIA monitoring arm underwent conventional fluid management without specific targets of ECW ratio by BIA.
Treatment:
Drug: Conventional fluid management without BIA monitoring

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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