Post Operative Cognitive Dysfunction Clinical Trial
— POCKOfficial title:
The Prevention of Post Operative Cognitive Dysfunction by Ketamine: a Prospective Multicenter Randomized Blinded Placebo-controlled Trial in Elderly Patients Undergoing Elective Orthopaedic Surgery
Verified date | September 2019 |
Source | Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Over 30 million patients require a major surgery annually in the US alone and more than half
of them are performed in patients over 60 years of age. Post-operative cognitive dysfunction
(POCD) is a keystone complication of these surgeries and affects up to 40% of surgical
patients aged over 60 years on discharge from the hospital. Despite controlled longitudinal
studies have shown that POCD is transient, it is associated with delirium, higher mortality,
earlier retirement, and greater utilization of social financial assistance The
pathophysiology of persistent postoperative cognitive dysfunction and causal relationship
between POCD and delirium remain incompletely understood. Identified clinical risk factors
for both include advanced age, type of surgery, preexisting cognitive impairment, and drug
addiction. We and others have provided evidence that the inflammatory response triggered by
surgical trauma and pain may contribute to the development of delirium and cognitive
impairment after surgery.
Ketamine, a N-methyl-D-aspartic acid receptor antagonist, is commonly used in anaesthesia and
postoperative analgesia. By reducing both pain and glutamate excitotoxic effects on neuronal
and microglial brain cells, it contributes to tone down the neuroinflammatory process
associated with surgery. A recent body of evidence has shown that ketamine reduces the
depressive-like behavior induced by inflammatory or stress-induced stimuli in mice. Ketamine
was also found to reduce levels of inflammatory biomarkers in cardiac surgical patients.
Orthopaedic surgery is a high-risk situation for developing postoperative cognitive
dysfunction. In patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery, the prevalence of POCD is 26% one
week after surgery and decreased to 10% at 3 months postoperatively, and a similar prevalence
is found 12 months after the operation. Postoperative delirium is associated with an
increased risk of POCD. Hundred thousands of patients > 60 years undergo elective orthopaedic
procedures per year around the world.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 307 |
Est. completion date | August 31, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | August 31, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 60 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: 1. Patients 60 years and older 2. Competent to provide informed consent 3. Undergoing major elective orthopaedic surgery under general anaesthesia 4. Patients with and without pre-existing neurodegenerative disease Exclusion Criteria: 1. Moribund patient or patient under palliative care 2. Expected length of stay at hospital < 48 hours 3. Patient under tutorship or curatorship 4. Surgical procedure performed under spinal or epidural anaesthesia without general anaesthesia 5. Emergency surgery (i.e. emergency hip fracture) 6. Patients with a known allergy to ketamine 7. Contraindication for ketamine: severe, uncontrolled arterial hypertension or severe heart (FEVG<25%) 8. Patient with glaucoma or history of thyrotoxicosis 9. Severe audition or vision disorder 10. Patients with drug misuse history (e.g., ketamine, cocaine, heroin, amphetamine, methamphetamine, MDMA (methylenedioxymethamphetamine), phencyclidine, lysergic acid, mescaline, psilocybin) 11. Patients taking anti-psychotic medications (e.g., chlorpromazine, clozapine, olanzapine, risperidone, haloperidol, quetiapine, risperidone, paliperidone, amisulpride, sertindole) 12. Patients with severe alcohol liver disease (TP<50% and or bilirubin > 50 µmol/L) 13. Pregnant or breast-feeding woman 14. Patient not speaking French 15. Absence of informed consent or request to not participate to the study 16. Non affiliation to the social security |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
France | AP-HP - Hôpital Saint-Antoine | Paris | Île-de-France |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris | Ministry of Health, France |
France,
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Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Proportion of early postoperative cognitive dysfunction | POCD assessed using MoCA (Montreal Cognitive Assessment) test and others cognitive tests included in the calculation of the combined Z-score | Days 7 and 90 after surgery | |
Secondary | Post-operative cognitive dysfunction type | The evaluation should be based on differences between pre- and postoperative performance (7 days or at discharge from the hospital if earlier and 3 months or earlier at the surgical follow-up visit depending on the practices of the different centers). | Days 7 and 90 after surgery | |
Secondary | Post-operative cognitive dysfunction severity | The evaluation should be based on differences between pre- and postoperative performance (7 days or at discharge from the hospital if earlier and 3 months or earlier at the surgical follow-up visit depending on the practices of the different centers). | Days 7 and 90 after surgery | |
Secondary | The Confusion Assessment Method for the Intensive Care Unit (CAM-ICU) | Measurements will start from postoperative day 0 two hours after the end of surgery to day 7 or discharge from the hospital if earlier, twice daily (morning and evening) with at least 6 hours between two consecutive measurements. | Days 7 before surgery or discharge from the hospital | |
Secondary | Early postoperative delirium | Patients with at least one episode of delirium measured by CAM (Confusion Assessment Method) or CAM-ICU (adaptation used in Intensive Care Unit) scores between day 0 and day 7 | 7 days after surgery | |
Secondary | Depression | Depression assessed using the Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS) | Days 7 and 90 after surgery | |
Secondary | Anxiety | Anxiety assessed using the Hospital and Anxiety Depression Scale. | Days 7 and 90 after surgery | |
Secondary | Pain status: Visual Analog Scale | Pain scores assessed by the patient-reported Visual Analog Scale. Neuropathic pain at 3 months measured by the DN4 (Douleur Neuropathique en 4 questions) questionnaire. | Day prior to surgery, at days 7 and 90 after surgery | |
Secondary | Time from surgery to POCD. | Time of occurrence of POCD (early or late) and his association with postoperative delirium | Days 7 and 90 after surgery | |
Secondary | Pre-existing cognitive status | Pre-existing cognitive status measured by the preoperative combined Z-score for cognitive functions and his association with the occurrence of postoperative delirium | Days 7 and 90 after surgery | |
Secondary | Preoperative Charlson's score for comorbidities | Preoperative Charlson's sore for comorbidities and his association with the occurrence of postoperative delirium | Days 7 and 90 after surgery | |
Secondary | Intraoperative serious adverse events | Intraoperative serious adverse events such as bleeding requiring at least 2 red cell units or unexpected prolonged duration of surgery and their association with postoperative delirium. | Day 7 | |
Secondary | Postoperative adverse events | Early post-operative complications (reoperation, hospital readmission, bleeding, transfusion, sepsis, hypoxemia, sodium disorders, specific medications, presence or absence of a specific rehabilitation program) recorded from patients' charts and their association with postoperative delirium. | Day 7 | |
Secondary | Hospital length of stay | Hospital length of stay assessed from patients' medical administrative data in days | Day 90 | |
Secondary | Cause of death | Cause of death as postoperative cardio-respiratory arrest and degradation of the general condition | Day 90 | |
Secondary | Hospital readmission | Hospital readmission during the follow up, whatever the etiology | Day 90 | |
Secondary | Inflammatory biomarkers | Inflammatory biomarkers (C Reactive Protein, Interleukin-6, Interleukin-2, TNFalpha, B-type natriuretic peptide and Troponin) levels and their association with the occurrence of postoperative delirium and long term POCD | Day 90 | |
Secondary | Quality of life evaluated thanks to the SF-36 scale | Quality of life evaluated thanks to the SF-36 scale is a 36-item patient-reported questionnaire that covers eight health domains: physical functioning (10 items), bodily pain (2 items), role limitations due to physical health problems (4 items), role limitations due to personal or emotional problems (4 items), emotional well-being (5 items), social functioning (2 items), energy/fatigue (4 items), and general health perceptions (5 items). Scores for each domain range from 0 to 100, with a higher score defining a more favorable health state | Day 90 |
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