Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Neuromuscular blocking agents (NMBA) are among the most commonly used drugs during general anesthesia and may induce complete muscle paralysis.They are used clinically to facilitate endotracheal intubation and to optimize surgical working conditions. Incomplete recovery from non-depolarising NMBAs continues to be a common problem in modern postoperative care unit and is associated with significant risk of microaspiration and hypoventilation which leads to pulmonary complications.Recently effective reversal of neuromuscular blockade has been described by use of lower dose of sugammadex the recommended without providing adequate answer to whether the lower dose is safe enough to avoid recurrent block.
Hypotheses:
The primary objective of this trial is to assess the dose-response characteristics of sugammadex in reversing rocuronium induced neuromuscular block and to identify the minimal effective dose
Secondary objective is to assess the safety of different doses of sugammadex (recurrent block (TOF ratio < 0.9) after reversal and the occurrence of adverse reactions)
Sugammadex is a very expensive drug which limits its use i anaesthesia department. By optimising drug dosage it may have economic impact and contribute to a wider use of sugammadex to reverse neuromuscular block before extubation and thus avoid incomplete recovery. This may lead to less risk for postoperative pulmonary complications and thereby reduce morbidity and mortality after surgery.
Full description
Doses of study drug will be 0 mg/kg Ideal Body Weight (IBW), 0.25 mg/kg IBW, 0.50 mg/kg IBW, 1.0 mg/kg IBW and 2.0 mg/kg IBW. TOF will be measured every 10th second until full reversal.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
144 participants in 5 patient groups, including a placebo group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Tayyba Aslam, MD; Espen Lindholm, MD, PHD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal