Fluid Therapy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Fluid Day: Observational Study About Fluid Therapy Administered in Adult Patients Undergoing Surgery in Our Country
Perioperative fluid therapy has undergone a huge change in clinical practice in recent years.
The patterns of replacement and / or restoration of volemia described in the classic
anaesthesiology books were supported by weak scientific evidence, and a paradigm shift in
perioperative fluid therapy based on aspects such as increased mortality associated with an
excessively positive balance of fluids in the perioperative period, evidences related to the
non-existence of the third non-anatomical space and the need to preserve the capillary
endothelium and its glycocalyx.
On the other hand, advances in technology, through the availability of less invasive
monitoring systems, capable of determining dynamic parameters related to blood volume that
allow predicting the response to volume management, have provided much more adequate
monitoring and simple to guide such intravenous volume restoration.
Following all these changes different guidelines and recommendations have been published in
recent years with the intention of clarifying the current evidence and facilitate the correct
use of fluid therapy to clinicians, but despite this the fact is that today the investigators
still do not have information on how fluid therapy is administered in daily practice, so the
section of Hemostasis, Transfusion Medicine and Fluid Therapy of SEDAR, considered it
necessary to evaluate the clinical practice of fluid therapy in the perioperative period
through the Fluidday study.
Background: The administration of fluids in the perioperative period is a routine clinical
practice that sometimes underestimates the repercussion of its correct administration.
According to the guidelines of the Spanish Society of Anesthesiology, Resuscitation and
Therapy of Pain (SEDAR), the objective of perioperative fluid therapy is to maintain the
organism with an optimal state of tissue perfusion and hydration.
This goal is not always easy to carry out. The continuous changes in surgical and anesthetic
techniques and the appearance of new fluids and monitoring devices make it difficult for the
anesthesiologist to carry out all these changes in his daily clinical practice. For this
reason, SEDAR and other international scientific societies have recently published guidelines
on the management of fluid therapy in the perioperative period, with the intention of
facilitating the decision making of the anesthesiologist in their usual clinical practice
based on current evidence. Also adding the recent withdrawal and commercial suspension of a
special type of fluid such as Hydroxyethylstarch.
Hypothesis: Fluid therapy in the surgical environment is administered in a protocolized
manner and in accordance with the recommendations of the different clinical practice
guidelines.
Objectives: To evaluate the management of fluid therapy by anesthesiologists in adult
patients during the perioperative period of scheduled and urgent surgery, taking into account
the types of fluids administered, the monitoring used and the application of guided therapy
protocols by objectives.
Methods: A multicenter prospective observational cross-sectional study - 24-hour Prevalence
Cut off is proposed to evaluate the fluid therapy administered by anesthesiologists in
surgical patients. The study will be carried out simultaneously in all hospitals that decide
to participate throughout the Spanish territory and the follow-up period will be a maximum of
24 hours. Two different intersemanial days will be chosen to include the maximum number of
episodes and types of surgeries.
Relevance: The clinical practice guidelines with their recommendations or suggestions offer a
safety tool for patients based on current scientific evidence, hence the importance of its
correct implementation. Sometimes problems of dissemination of information or limitations in
the application of the same can cause that these objectives are not met.
From the Section of Hemostasis, Transfusion Medicine and Fluid Therapy of the SEDAR, it is
intended to assess the implementation and follow-up of the recommendations and / or
suggestions issued in the different clinical practice guidelines for the correct management
of Fluid Therapy in the perioperative setting by performing of this study. This will allow
locating the points of improvement in the usual clinical practice on perioperative fluid
therapy and will contribute on the one hand to the implementation of the different clinical
practice guidelines and, on the other hand, it will serve as a base material for the
development of future lines of research.
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