Spine Surgery Clinical Trial
Official title:
Does Pre-operative Carbohydrate Loading Reduce Insulin Resistance and Improve Outcomes in Elective Surgical Patients?
The recent development of an oral carbohydrate drink for consumption prior to elective
surgical procedures has been shown to improve insulin sensitivity. However, these studies
have not investigated the use of this carbohydrate supplement in patients undergoing cardiac
and spinal surgery.
Hypothesis: The administration of 100g of carbohydrates the evening before and 50g of
carbohydrates two hours before elective coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) or spinal
surgery will reduce postoperative insulin resistance by 40% compared to those undergoing the
standard of care of fasting the evening before and the day of surgery.
In many Western hospitals, including St. Michael's Hospital, fasting for 12-14 hours is the
standard protocol for patients entering elective surgery. Fasting results in a depletion of
energy stores and consequently, a patient enters surgery in a catabolic state. Furthermore,
the human body reacts to surgery by producing a variety of stress hormones and other
hormone-like proteins that enable the body to react to stress or injury appropriately. One
of the changes that occurs with surgery is related to how the body stores and metabolizes
glucose. During and after surgery, muscle and adipose tissue become less sensitive to the
action of insulin (insulin resistant). Insulin resistance results in a reduced uptake of
glucose by these tissues and subsequently to a rise in circulating blood glucose levels.
Sustained high levels of blood glucose have been associated with post-surgical complications
and less favourable outcomes. Previous studies have found that fasting before surgery
exacerbates insulin resistance during and after surgery. The recent development of a
carbohydrate drink for consumption prior to elective surgical procedures has been shown to
be well tolerated and pose no additional risk of pulmonary aspiration when ingested two
hours prior to surgery. Furthermore, there appears to be metabolic, psychological and
possibly clinical benefits in pre-operative carbohydrate loading compared to fasting,
including improvements in insulin resistance. However, the studies done to date have been
limited by their small sample size, their lack of clinical outcome data and their reliance
upon predominantly surgeries of shorter duration and reduced metabolic stress where insulin
resistance is lower. Therefore, there is a need to investigate the effect of carbohydrate
loading on insulin resistance and clinical outcomes in patients undergoing surgery of
extended duration and complexity.
Patients undergoing major cardiac and spinal surgery are ideal for studying the effects of
pre-operative carbohydrate loading since this type of operation is of long duration and
relatively high surgical stress resulting in the development of significant insulin
resistance, and thus potentially benefit from pre-operative carbohydrate loading. Therefore,
we will be conducting a larger randomized trial investigating the effects of pre-operative
carbohydrate loading in comparison with fasting on insulin resistance and clinical outcomes
in patients undergoing invasive cardiac and spinal surgery at St. Michael's Hospital.
We hypothesize that consumption of a pre-operative carbohydrate load will reduce
postoperative insulin resistance by 40% (measured by the standardized short insulin
tolerance test). As secondary outcomes, we hypothesize that pre-operative carbohydrate
loading will reduce circulating markers of inflammation and stress as well as improve
clinical outcomes such as blood product utilization, incidence of hyperglycemia, rates of
adverse events and length of stay in comparison with standard pre-operative fasting. This
study will provide important information regarding the clinical benefits associated with the
consumption of a pre-operative carbohydrate load. Many European centres have already
liberalized their pre-operative treatments; this study will help to optimize the
perioperative management and outcomes of surgical patients at our institution.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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