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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03864016
Other study ID # BERTHOUD 2018
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date March 20, 2019
Est. completion date October 22, 2019

Study information

Verified date March 2019
Source Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Dijon
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The objective of general anesthesia is to obtain a loss of consciousness, stillness, and sufficient analgesia to allow surgery. Thus, general anesthesia has two components: hypnosis and analgesia. Combining these two components, with parallel use of a hypnotic agent and a morphine agent makes major surgery possible by limiting the stress on the body. In clinical practice, hypnosis can be assessed by a monitor of the depth of BIS®-type anesthesia, based on a simplified measurement of the patient's spontaneous cortical electroencephalographic activity. However, BIS® type monitors do not specifically judge analgesia.

Traditionally, analgesia is assessed on the basis of hemodynamic changes (blood pressure, heart rate) in relation to a nociceptive stimulus. There is an interaction between pain and cardiovascular control that is mediated by the baroreflex system. But not all hemodynamic changes during general anesthesia are necessarily secondary to nociceptive stimulation. For example, hypovolemia may be responsible for tachycardia without causing pain; opening the pericardium during cardiac surgery may increase blood pressure by increasing cardiac output.... On the other hand, a decrease in hemodynamic response can be observed in relation to the depressant effect of anesthetic agents, despite a lack of analgesia. Similarly, patients' disease-modifying treatments may mask hemodynamic responses (e.g. beta blocker). Thus, the appearance of tachycardia or high blood pressure during surgery does not necessarily reflect a nociceptive process. Currently, the available data do not allow the anaesthetist to differentiate between real hemodynamic changes related to nociception and sympathicotonia. This leads to typical management consisting of an increase in the dosage of morphine.

Pupillometry (monitoring the pupillary dilation reflex) is a simple and sensitive clinical approach that can be done during general anesthesia to specifically monitor the nociceptive component. The main objective of monitoring is to achieve a more rational use of opioids. This means optimizing opioid dosing, ensuring safety by monitoring the lowering of opioid dosages intraoperatively without the risk of waking up, and reducing postoperative hyperalgesia. In the context of cardiac surgery, the interpretation of hemodynamic changes could be facilitated by nociception monitoring coupled with anesthesia monitoring (BIS). Reducing opiod doses without changing other clinical parameters could ensure better hemodynamic stability in increasingly fragile patients.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 50
Est. completion date October 22, 2019
Est. primary completion date October 22, 2019
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Person who has given written consent

- Adult patient

- Patient undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery with CEC, with or without valve surgery, by sternotomy.

- ASA <4.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Person not affiliated to the national health insurance system

- Person subject to legal protection (curatorship, guardianship)

- Person who has been deemed mentally incompetent

- Pregnant, parturient or breastfeeding woman

- Adult unable or unwilling to provide consent

- Patient with preoperative cognitive dysfunction (MMS <13) (APPENDIX 6),

- Patient with morphine intolerance,

- Patient on long-term opioid treatment,

- Emergency surgery,

- Eye disease, corneal injury, or wearing contact lenses, a neurological disease that can influence the pupillary reflex,

- Refusal to participate

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms

  • Patients Undergoing Cardiac Surgery
  • Patients With Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery With CEC

Intervention

Drug:
Induction and maintenance of anesthesia
The hypnotic agent used is Propofol and the morphine agent used is Sufentanil.
Adaptation of sufentanil doses according to the usual protocol
At induction the target concentration of sufentanil is 0.5 ng/ml. The sufentanil dose is decided by the anaesthetist, taking into account the operating times (induction, TIO, incision, opening and sternal spacing, CEC, closure), the usual data provided by the monitoring: heart rate, blood pressure, BIS, EtCO2, modification of insufflation pressures.
Adjustment of sufentanil doses according to pupillometry
At induction, the target concentration of sufentanil is 0.5 ng/ml. The dose of sufentanil is then adjusted according to the dilation reflex obtained with the PPI (Pain Pupillary Index) at predefined times.

Locations

Country Name City State
France Chu Dijon Bourgogne Dijon

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Dijon

Country where clinical trial is conducted

France, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Total dose of sufentanil required per operation Total dose of sufentanil expressed in µg Through study completion an average of 2 years
See also
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