High-risk, Non-cardiovascular Surgeries Clinical Trial
Official title:
Safety and Efficacy of Esmolol for the Treatment of Peri-operative Tachycardia in Patients at Risk for Post Operative Adverse Ischemic Outcomes
Verified date | November 2014 |
Source | Duke University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | United States: Institutional Review Board |
Study type | Interventional |
The purpose of this study is to find out if Esmolol is a safe and effective alternative treatment compared to standard treatment using a long acting beta blocker drug, in controlling abnormal heart rate before, during and immediately after surgery.
Status | Terminated |
Enrollment | 76 |
Est. completion date | July 2013 |
Est. primary completion date | July 2013 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 41 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: 1. Males or Females 2. Age > 40y/o 3. Scheduled high risk (ASA II-IV) non-cardiac surgery with anticipated 12 hour post-operative ICU care 4. Written informed consent 5. Patients on a stable chronic oral beta-blocker therapy 6. Revised Cardiac Risk Index 1(below) Cardiac Risk Index 1 or greater (below) - a history of coronary disease - a history of congestive heart failure - a history of treated diabetes - a history of cerebrovascular disease - a history of chronic renal failure Exclusion Criteria: 1. Active bleeding 2. Untreated left main disease 3. Active cardiac condition (eg unstable angina pectoris, acute exacerbation of CHF, serious arrhythmias, symptomatic valve disease) 4. Preoperative positive troponin T 5. Contraindication for esmolol use 6. Previous allergy or intolerance to esmolol 7. Cancer with an expected life expectancy < 6 months 8. Pregnancy or lactating or planning to become pregnant 9. Failure to provide informed consent, unable to understand or follow instructions. 10. History of drug allergy or idiosyncrasy to beta-adrenergic drugs 11. Recent history (within 1 year) of drug or alcohol abuse 12. Patients with a Pacemaker 13. Abnormal liver function Child-Pugh - B 14. Body Mass Index > 45 15. Reactive airway disease (defined as a history of hospitalization with status asthmaticus within the past one year) 16. Surgery scheduled to begin after 2pm |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Ohio State University | Columbus | Ohio |
United States | Duke University Medical Center | Durham | North Carolina |
United States | Durham VA Medical Center | Durham | North Carolina |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Duke University | Baxter Healthcare Corporation |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Percentage of Intraoperative Case Time With Heart Rate (HR) <60 or >80 Bpm | Duration of intraoperative excursion (ie, time spent) outside Target HR range defined as 60 to 80 bpm during surgery, expressed as percent of case minutes. Vital signs are measured from start of surgery to end of surgery at 5 minute intervals or less. | Start of surgery to end of surgery, an average duration of 245 minutes | Yes |
Primary | Percentage of Postoperative First Three Hours With Heart Rate (HR) <60 or >80 Bpm | Duration of postoperative first three hours spent outside Target HR range defined as 60 to 80 bpm, expressed as percent of the total 3 hours. Vital signs are measured from end of surgery to 3 hours postoperatively at 5 minute intervals for the first hour and every 15 minutes thereafter. | End of surgery to 3 hours | Yes |
Primary | Percentage of Postoperative Hours 4 to 12 With Heart Rate (HR) <60 or >80 Bpm. | Duration of postoperative hours 4 to 12 spent outside Target HR range defined as 60 to 80 bpm, expressed as percent of the total 9 hours. Vital signs are measured during hours four and five at 30 minute intervals and once every hour for the next 7 hours, through 12 hours postoperatively. | Postoperative hours 4-12 | Yes |
Secondary | Percentage of Intraoperative Case Time With Systolic Blood Pressure <95 mmHg | Duration of intraoperative case time patient was not in the target window of SBP > 95 mmHg, expressed as percent of total case minutes. SBP is measured from start of surgery to end of surgery at 5 minute intervals or less. | Start of surgery to end of surgery, an average duration of 245 minutes | Yes |
Secondary | Percentage of Postoperative First Three Hours With Systolic Blood Pressure <95 mmHg | Duration of postoperative first three hours patient was not in the target window of SBP > 95 mmHg, expressed as percent of the total 3 hours. SBP is measured from end of surgery to 3 hours postoperatively at 5 minute intervals for first hour and every 15 minutes thereafter. | end of surgery to 3 hours | Yes |
Secondary | Percentage of Postoperative Hours 4 to 12 With Systolic Blood Pressure <95 mmHg | Duration of postoperative hours 4 to 12 patient was not in the target window of SBP > 95 mmHg, expressed as percent of the total 9 hours. SBP was measured during hours four and five at 30 minute intervals and once every hour for the next 7 hours, through 12 hours postoperatively. | Postoperative hours 4-12 | Yes |