Postoperative Care Clinical Trial
Official title:
Multicenter Randomized Controled Trial of Perioperative Hemodynamic Optimization in High-Risk Patients Using Less-Invasive Monitoringng Methods
The aim of this study is to evaluate different strategies of hemodynamic optimization in high risk surgical patients during the first twelve postoperative hours in ICU based on a protocol guided by a less invasive monitorig tool (Vigileo®), oriented by a fiberoptic central venous catheter that allows continuous monitorig of SvcO2 (PreSep®), and a pressure transducer (FloTrac®) that allows cardiac output calculation by the standard deviation of mean arterial pressure or a standard resuscitation strategy.
Patients submitted to high risk surgical procedures generally show a hyperdynamic pattern
due to the metabolic response after the surgical trauma. This response is fundamentally
dependent on their functional reserve and on the treatment. Data from UK show an aged
population with 15 to 30% of mortality in the first thirty days after surgery, generally
having respiratory or cardiac co-morbidities1. Identification of these patients besides
protocol implementation aiming to an appropriate support is the basic strategy to warrant a
better outcome in the post-operative period.
Shoemaker has established the definition criteria to high risk patients at the end of the
80’s. Those criteria are accepted until today. He too demonstrated the benefits of
hemodynamic optimization in order to achieve “supra-normal” oxygen delivery.
Unfortunately, in the years to come, there was a backlash in this concept due to results of
several heterogeneous and misleading studies that cast doubts about the efficacy of that
strategy. Heyland, however, observed benefit when the hemodynamic optimization was
instituted before the surgery.
In the 90’s, support to high risk surgical patients had a new start, with publication of
several studies demonstrating reduction on morbidity, mortality, and hospital and ICU
lengths of stay. In a recent metaanalysis of twenty one studies, Kern and Shoemaker
concluded that there was mortality reduction when hemodynamic optimization was started early
before organ dysfunction has ensued. There was greater benefit in those studies where the
control group had a 20% mortality or more and when the therapy achieved differences on
oxygen delivery between the control and treatment groups.
Despite the strong evidence favoring hemodynamic optimization, as long as the high risk
patients are identified, more studies are necessary to better answer some questions such as:
what is the importance of volemic replacement, what is the best solution to be used, and
what is the best method for monitoring for the patient response. Catecholamines must be used
carefully, despite their theoretic capacity of modulating inflammatory response. It appears
that optimization has to be done early in the pre-operative period when organ dysfunction
has not ensued yet. We have to discover for how long the optimization has to be maintained
during and after the surgery.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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