Fasting Clinical Trial
— PRACTICEOfficial title:
Preoperative Fasting for Ambulatory Cataract Surgery: A Time-Interrupted Prospective Study
The current standard for cataract surgery is phacoemulsification with intraocular lens (IOL)
implantation. In this procedure, topical anesthesia has become favoured over local anesthetic
blocks due to potential serious complications resulting from retrobulbar or peribulbar
anesthesia. Routinely, intravenous sedation is used to supplement the topical anesthesia. If
patients are not fasted, there is the potential to reduce preoperative discomfort and
anxiety, ultimately improving the satisfaction with the care received. An additional benefit
is that liberal fasting policies allow for flexibility in the scheduling of cases,
particularly for urgent or semi-urgent situations. Clinical practice guidelines for cataract
surgery published by the Canadian Ophthalmological Society (COS) recommend that fasting is
unnecessary if only topical anesthesia is used without intravenous (IV) opiates or sedation.
In general, these suggestions are in agreement with guidelines from the United Kingdom's
Royal College of Ophthalmologists, who note that "it is unnecessary to fast patients for
local anesthetic cataract surgery." According to the CAS practice guidelines, the same
fasting restrictions are applied when IV sedation or anesthesia with peripheral nerve blocks
(e.g. retrobulbar or peribulbar blocks) are administered. At our centre at the Kensington Eye
Institute (KEI) in Toronto, Canada, almost all cataract patients receive fentanyl and
midazolam, with propofol given only in rare circumstances with close observation.
This research project at the Kensington Eye Institute will consist of two phases, namely a
prospective, consecutive observational analysis and a prospective time-interrupted study. In
the first phase, an observational analysis will be conducted in which consecutive cataract
surgery patients will be surveyed with a validated questionnaire to assess their
satisfaction. Inclusion criteria will include any cataract patient scheduled for surgery who
is willing and able to participate in the study, with fully informed consent provided.
Previously published literature has evaluated the use of a patient satisfaction questionnaire
regarding preoperative fasting, which includes items on hunger, thirst, hoarseness of voice,
difficulty breathing, pain, agitation, anxiety, nausea, vomiting, shivering and problems with
concentration. A Research Assistant will complete the questionnaire with all patients
preoperatively at KEI, as well as a baseline demographic checklist that will include the
patient's age, gender, laterality, surgeon, length of time fasted for solids and clear
liquids, as well as the type and amount of solids and liquids. Secondary endpoints will be
collected postoperatively and will include the incidence of aspiration, nausea and vomiting,
as well as the rate of cancellations of surgeries directly related to issues with fasting
guidelines. The first phase of the study will be used to conduct an appropriate sample size
calculation, which will ensure that our second phase is not underpowered for the primary
efficacy endpoint.
In the second phase, a time-interrupted prospective study will be established with the
following two arms: (1) experimental arm: patients will be encouraged by the Research
Assistant to drink clear fluids right up to the 2 hour limit as specified in the latest ASA
and CAS guidelines, with no intervention applied for solids, and (2): control arm: standard
of care without any encouragement to drink clear fluids up to the 2 hour limit. Patients will
be assigned to groups based on month, so that the first month of study execution will enroll
all patients into the experimental arm, the second month will enroll only into the control
arm, and that subsequent months will alternate enrollment in a similar method.
Given the design, the study will be in accordance with the latest ASA and CAS preoperative
fasting guidelines, and will not involve any use of financial or other methods of coercion to
incentivize patients that are randomly assigned to the experimental arm. The encouragement
process will only involve the Research Assistant asking and encouraging the patient to drink
a standardized quantity of clear fluid (up to 400mL of water, coffee, tea, apple or cranberry
juice and maximum of 2 teaspoons of sugar) up to the ASA and CAS mandated guideline of 2
hours preoperatively, with the patient making the final determination of whether to comply.
Following the encouragement process, a demographics and satisfaction questionnaire will be
administered to each patient preoperatively, as well as another satisfaction questionnaire
administered following the surgery. Baseline demographics, primary and secondary endpoints
will remain consistent with the first phase.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 150 |
Est. completion date | August 31, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | August 30, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - any cataract patient scheduled for surgery at the Kensington Eye Institute who is willing and able to participate in the study, with fully informed consent provided. Exclusion Criteria: |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Kensington Eye Institute | Toronto | Ontario |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Toronto |
Canada,
Bopp C, Hofer S, Klein A, Weigand MA, Martin E, Gust R. A liberal preoperative fasting regimen improves patient comfort and satisfaction with anesthesia care in day-stay minor surgery. Minerva Anestesiol. 2011 Jul;77(7):680-6. Epub 2009 Feb 4. — View Citation
Canadian Ophthalmological Society Cataract Surgery Clinical Practice Guideline Expert Committee. Canadian Ophthalmological Society evidence-based clinical practice guidelines for cataract surgery in the adult eye. Can J Ophthalmol. 2008 Oct;43 Suppl 1:S7-57. doi: 10.1139/i08-133. English, French. — View Citation
Dobson G, Chong M, Chow L, Flexman A, Kurrek M, Laflamme C, Lagacé A, Stacey S, Thiessen B. Guidelines to the Practice of Anesthesia - Revised Edition 2018. Can J Anaesth. 2018 Jan;65(1):76-104. doi: 10.1007/s12630-017-0995-9. Epub 2017 Dec 14. — View Citation
Hosoda Y, Kuriyama S, Jingami Y, Hattori H, Hayashi H, Matsumoto M. A comparison of patient pain and visual outcome using topical anesthesia versus regional anesthesia during cataract surgery. Clin Ophthalmol. 2016 Jun 20;10:1139-44. doi: 10.2147/OPTH.S109360. eCollection 2016. — View Citation
Pandey SK, Werner L, Apple DJ, Agarwal A, Agarwal A, Agarwal S. No-anesthesia clear corneal phacoemulsification versus topical and topical plus intracameral anesthesia. Randomized clinical trial. J Cataract Refract Surg. 2001 Oct;27(10):1643-50. — View Citation
Practice Guidelines for Preoperative Fasting and the Use of Pharmacologic Agents to Reduce the Risk of Pulmonary Aspiration: Application to Healthy Patients Undergoing Elective Procedures: An Updated Report by the American Society of Anesthesiologists Task Force on Preoperative Fasting and the Use of Pharmacologic Agents to Reduce the Risk of Pulmonary Aspiration. Anesthesiology. 2017 Mar;126(3):376-393. doi: 10.1097/ALN.0000000000001452. — View Citation
Royal College of Ophthalmologists. Cataract Surgery Guidelines. London, UK: Royal College of Ophthalmologists, 2004.
Smith R. Cataract extraction without retrobulbar anaesthetic injection. Br J Ophthalmol. 1990 Apr;74(4):205-7. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Rates of postoperative aspiration | The proportion of patients in sample sustaining aspiration postoperatively. | Immediately post-operatively | |
Other | Rates of cancellation of surgery due to preoperative fasting requirement violation | The proportion of cataract surgery patients at the surgical centre in the study timeframe needing to have surgery cancelled due to preoperative fasting requirement violation | Immediately post-operatively | |
Primary | Demographic baseline parameters | Patient number, age, gender, surgery on left or right eye, surgeon, fasting time - solids (hours), fasting time - clear liquids (hours), solid foods eaten in last 24 hours, liquids drank in last 24 hours | Immediately post-operatively | |
Primary | Satisfaction Questionnaire | Hunger, thirst, voice hoarseness, difficulty breathing, pain, agitation, anxiety, nausea, vomiting, shivering, difficulty in concentration Scale name: patient satisfaction with preoperative fasting questionnaire For this scale, the following choices will be provided for each item: strongly agree, agree, neutral, disagree, strongly disagree. Strongly agree and agree options represent a worse outcome. Strongly disagree and disagree options represent a better outcome. The scores from individual items will be averaged to yield a total score. |
Immediately post-operatively | |
Secondary | Regarding patient satisfaction survey | The proportion of participants that believe the survey is effective, clear, relevant, simple and consistent in measuring distress and burden of preoperative fasting. The number of participants that suggest further questions to add to the existing survey. | Immediately post-operatively |
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