One Lung Ventilation Clinical Trial
Official title:
Selective Lobar Blockade: A Randomized Trial of Three Bronchial Blockers
Selective lobar blockade (SLB) is a specific technique that allows collapse of the operated lobe during thoracic surgery while the other lobes are ventilated. It is associated with the improvement of arterial oxygenation during one lung ventilation (OLV) for thoracic with providing adequate surgical access. The purpose of this study is to compare the efficacy of three bronchial blockers, namely an Arndt® wire-guided endobronchial blocker, a Cohen Flexi-tip endobronchial blocker or a Fuji Uni-blocker, for achieving selective lobar collapse.
Prevention of hypoxemia associated with one-lung ventilation (OLV) during video-assisted
thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) or open thoracotomy has a priority for anesthetists.
Selective lobar blockade (SLB) is a specific technique that allows collapse of the operated
lobe during thoracic surgery while the other lobes are ventilated. SLB has been recommended
to enhance the safety of OLV in patients with previous pulmonary resection requiring
subsequent resection or in patients with limited pulmonary reserve resulting from severe
pulmonary disease.1
One of the advantages of SLB is the improvement of arterial oxygenation in patients
undergoing lobectomy with providing adequate lobar collapse for surgical access.2 Similarly,
selective left lower lobar blockade during lower esophageal surgery provides a lower
intraoperative intrapulmonary shunt and a better perioperative arterial oxygenation.3
SLB can be achieved with a Coopdech endobronchial blocker tube (COOPDECH™, Osaka, Japan),3an
Arndt® wire-guided endobronchial blocker (Cook Inc., Bloomington, IN)4-6 or with an
embolectomy catheter,7 can be used through a single-lumen endotracheal tube (ETT), attached
to a single-lumen ETT with a sided channel (Univent tube),2 or placed under direct
laryngoscopy.7
Up to best of the authors' knowledge, there is no consensus on the best technique for
selective lobar blockade for thoracic surgery.
The purpose of this study is to compare the efficacy of three bronchial blockers, namely an
Arndt® wire-guided endobronchial blocker, a Cohen Flexi-tip endobronchial blocker (Cook
Critical Care, Bloomington, IN) or a Fuji Uni-blocker (Fuji Systems, Tokyo, Japan), for
achieving selective lobar collapse. It is generally accepted that bronchial blockers perform
better clinically when positioned in the longer left mainstem bronchus versus the shorter
right bronchus.9 However, this could not be extended for the SLB. Thus, the present study
will include both sides thoracic procedures and studied patients will be stratified to the
side on which their surgery will be performed, right or left.
An independent investigator who will be blind to the study groups and who will not be
involved in the patients' management will collect the saved recorded patient data by the
attending anesthesiologists.
The surgeons, who will be absent from the operating room during DLT or bronchial blocker
placement, will be blind to randomization and to the isolation device by means of an opaque
sheet placed over the lung isolation device.
In all patients, standard monitoring, including radial arterial catheterization, and state
and response entropy (SE and RE, respectively) will be applied. Patients will received either
a thoracic epidural or a paravertebral catheter before the induction of anesthesia for open
thoracotomy or patient-controlled systemic morphine after VATS, for postoperative analgesia.
Anesthetic technique will be standardized in all studied patients. The same senior
anesthesiologists (> 5 years' experience), who are experienced in thoracic surgery, OLV, and
the use of a FOB for DLT and bronchial blockers placement, will give the anesthetic, will
place all of the isolation devices in the studied groups and will not be involved in the
patient's assessment.
General anesthesia will be induced with propofol (2-3 mg/kg) and fentanyl (2-3 µg/kg).
Cisatracurium (0.2 mg/kg) will be given to facilitate the placement of the isolation device.
Anesthesia will be maintained with 0.7-1.5 minimum alveolar concentration (MAC) of
sevoflurane or total intravenous anesthesia according to each center's protocol to maintain
the SE values < 50 and the difference between RE and SE < 10. fentanyl 0.5µg/kg increments
will be administered when the SE values > 50, the difference between RE and SE >10, and the
heart rate and MAP are >20% of the baseline values despite a target sevoflurane MAC ≥ 1.5.
Cisatracurium increments will be used to maintain surgical relaxation as indicated by
train-of-4 monitoring.
Patients' two lungs will be ventilated, with a fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) of 0.5 in
air, tidal volume (VT) of 8 mL/kg predicted body weight (PBW), inspiratory to expiratory [I:
E] ratio of 1:2.5 and positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP) of 5 cm H2O, and respiratory
rate adjusted to achieve an arterial carbon dioxide tension of 35-45 mm Hg. Peak airway
pressure will be limited to 35 cm H2O and a fresh gas flow (FGF) < 2 L/min will be used.
The patients' tracheas will be intubated using a Macintosh laryngoscope with either an
appropriately sized left-sided DLT (DLT group)10 or a minimum 7.5-mm internal diameter (ID)
ETT for women and 8.0-mm ID ETT for men, which will be connected to a dedicated multiport
airway adapter to allow continuous ventilation of the patients during the placement of the
bronchial blockers (bronchial blockers groups).
In the DLT group; the correct placement of the DLT will be assessed by using an FOB. Then,
the lumen of the nondependent lung will be clamped and left open to air to facilitate
unilateral lung collapse.
In the bronchial blockers groups; all bronchial blockers will be placed via the ETT according
to the manufacturers' recommended instructions. To achieve selective lobe collapse during
surgery, the bronchial blocker will be advanced and directed to block selectively the desired
operated lobe (or lobes) only; under vision with a pediatric FOB. The bronchial blocker will
be placed deeply into the desired bronchus to minimize the chance of dislodgment back into
the mainstem bronchus or trachea. If surgery will be performed in either the right middle or
lower lobe, both lobes will be collapsed while the right upper lobe will be ventilated. If
surgery will be performed in either the left lower or upper lobe, the left upper or lower
lobe will be collapsed, respectively, while the remaining lobe will be ventilated. For the
Arndt® blocker, once the blocker will be in an optimal position, the wire loop will be
removed to use the wire channel for suction. To facilitate the selected lobar collapse, a
barrel part of a 1-mL insulin syringe will be attached to the suction port of the bronchial
blocker, and will be connected to suction.
OLV will be initiated using a VT of 6 mL/kg PBW, FiO2 of 0.3-1.0 to maintain SaO2 > 92%,
whereas the I: E ratio, PEEP, respiratory rate, and FGF will be maintained as during two-lung
ventilation. Recruitment maneuvers for the dependent lung will be repeated at 30-minute
intervals by raising the inspiratory pressure up to 40 cmH2O for 10 seconds.
The patients will be then turned to the lateral decubitus position for surgery, the position
of the DLT or the bronchial blocker will be checked with FOB. All operations were performed
by the same surgeons.
If the lung collapse is not satisfactory or if any ventilation problem occurs during surgery,
such as an increase of peak pressure, the FOB will be passed to reposition the bronchial cuff
of the DLT or the bronchial blocker; if it is not appropriately positioned in the desired
bronchus.
Patient will be withdrawn from the study and total operative lung collapse will be considered
if the surgeon rates the VAS of the operative field conditions as 30 mm or less despite the
confirmation of the appropriate position of the isolation device with FOB.
Intraoperative hypoxemia will be defined as decreases in SaO2 less than 90% will be treated
with increasing of FiO2 to 1.0. Addition of low level of 2 cm H2O of CPAP to the ventilated
lung (or lobes) will be considered if the former fails to correct hypoxemia.
At the end of surgery, the operative lung will be re-expanded, two-lung ventilation will be
resumed, sevoflurane will be discontinued and the residual neuromuscular block will be
antagonized.
Before extubation, FOB will be performed in all patients to observe whether there was any
damage to the tracheal or bronchial mucosa. For the Arndt® blocker group, the bronchial
blocker will be deflated and then withdrawn together with the multiport connector to prevent
shredding the plastic balloon over the blocker port.
Each of the four lung isolation groups will be further subdivided into two subgroups
according to the side of surgery to right-sided and left-sided subgroups.
Sample Size Calculation:
A power analysis of data from our pilot study on a similar surgical population indicated that
we need to study 14 subjects in each group to detect a 15-mm true difference in the mean
visual analog scale (VAS) rating of the to rate the deflation of the target lung lobe with a
standard deviation (S.D.) of 1.22, a type-I error of 0.0083 (0.05 / 6 possible comparisons)
and a power of 90%. We will add 10% more patients for a final sample size of 60 patients to
account for patients dropping out during the study.
;
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