Cardiopulmonary Bypass Clinical Trial
Official title:
Phase IV Study of Perioperative Steroid's Effects on Death or MI in High-Risk Patients Undergoing Cardiac Surgery Requiring Cardiopulmonary Bypass
SIRS trial is a large simple study in which high-risk patients undergoing cardiac surgery requiring the use of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) are randomly allocated to receive a pulse dose of Methylprednisolone or a matching placebo. Cardiopulmonary bypass initiates a systemic inflammatory response that facilitates development of post-operative complications. SIRS will confirm or deny the potential clinical benefits of suppressing this response through the use of systemic steroids. Specifically, does 250 mg of intravenous Methylprednisolone given twice, once on anesthetic induction and again on CPB initiation, result in improved early survival and less myocardial infarction in high-risk cardiac surgery patients requiring CPB?
Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is a commonly performed surgical procedure with over 500,000
per year in North America. CPB initiates a systemic inflammatory response characterized by
both cell and protein activation. Platelets, neutrophils, monocytes, macrophages,
coagulation, fibrinolytic, and kallikrein cascades all take part in what results in
increased endothelial permeability, vascular, and parenchymal damage. These inflammatory
pathways facilitate development of post-operative complications including thrombosis,
myocardial injury and infarction, respiratory failure, renal and neurological dysfunction,
bleeding disorders, altered liver function and ultimately, multiple organ failure.
In an attempt to minimize the deleterious effects of CPB, investigators have tested a
variety of strategies in cardiac surgery ranging from the complete avoidance of CPB, to the
use of biocompatible circuits and pharmacologic agents to abrogate the systemic response.
Investigators have consistently demonstrated the efficacy of steroids as the most potent
anti-inflammatory agent for use during CPB. In fact, from the available evidence, the 2004
AHA guidelines for coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) "support liberal prophylactic use
in patients undergoing extracorporeal circulation". However, the trials that do exist within
this literature are focused on biochemical endpoints and are insufficiently powered to make
conclusions on hard clinical endpoints. Our pilot RCT, SIRS I, demonstrated the efficacy of
a low dose steroid protocol in the suppression of this inflammatory cascade. We hypothesize
that this low dose protocol will yield clinical benefit while avoiding the potential adverse
effects of steroids which are known to be dose dependent.
The primary aim of the SIRS trial is to determine if perioperative pulse dose
Methylprednisolone results in improved early survival and less myocardial infarction in
cardiac surgery requiring CPB. Additional secondary aims of the SIRS trial are to determine
the effect of steroids on other clinical outcomes including length of stay, new onset atrial
fibrillation, transfusion requirements, infectious, wound, and gastrointestinal
complications.
The design of the SIRS trial is a prospective multicentre international double-blind placebo
controlled randomized clinical trial. The sample size of 7500 patients will have 80% to 90%
power to detect a 20-30% RRR for the primary outcome with an α=0.05 (two-sided),
anticipating a 6% rate of death in the control arm. Our aim is to have 85 international
centers participate which, recruiting at 5 patients per month, would complete recruitment in
36 months. This will be a large trial with a simple design and objective outcomes.
A sub-group of patients will be enrolled in a renal sub-study. This sub-study will determine
if the risk of acute kidney injury is lower in patients treated with intravenous steroid
versus placebo, if steroids lead to better preservation of kidney function six months after
cardiac surgery, and whether the impact of steroid exposure differs in patients with and
without pre-operative chronic kidney disease.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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