Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Not yet recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
80

Summary

Conditions
Blood Pressure
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentIntervention Model Description: Parallel group randomized trial.Masking: Double (Participant, Outcomes Assessor)Primary Purpose: Prevention

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 45 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Consenting patients who take either angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs), angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs), or calcium channel blockers will be asked not to take the medications on the morning of surgery, and instead bring them with them to the hospital. Qualifying patients will be r...

Consenting patients who take either angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs), angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs), or calcium channel blockers will be asked not to take the medications on the morning of surgery, and instead bring them with them to the hospital. Qualifying patients will be randomized 1:1, with random-sized blocks. The treatments will be: 1) norepinephrine or phenylephrine infusion to maintain intraoperative MAP ?85 mmHg, delayed resumption of chronic antihypertensive medications, and a target ward systolic pressure >110 mmHg (tight pressure management); or, 2) routine intraoperative blood pressure management and prompt resumption of chronic antihypertensive medications (routine pressure management). Tight pressure management: In patients assigned to tight pressure management, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers will not be given the morning of surgery. Other chronic antihypertensives will only be given as necessary to treat hypertension. A norepinephrine or phenylephrine infusion (in the preferred local concentration) will be prepared, connected to an intravenous catheter, and activated at a low rate. Norepinephrine can be safely given through a central catheter or peripherally. General anesthesia will be induced with propofol or etomidate which will be given in repeated small boluses or target-controlled infusion in an effort to keep mean arterial pressure ?85 mmHg. Clinicians will be encouraged to use etomidate when rapid-sequence inductions are required. Simultaneously, the vasopressor infusion will be adjusted with the same goal. Anesthetic dose, fluid administration, and vasopressor administration will be adjusted with the goal of maintaining the individual designated baseline mean arterial pressure. Invasive or non-invasive advanced hemodynamic monitoring is not required, but should be used when practical. Clinicians should use available information to optimize vascular volume, afterload, and inotropy. Resumption of chronic anti-hypertensive medications will be delayed until the third postoperative day unless deemed necessary to treat hypertension or for some other clear indication because >90% of MINS occurs within 48 hours after surgery. When necessary to treat hypertension, chronic antihypertensive or new medications can be used per clinician preference. Clinicians will make what efforts they can to maintain postoperative systolic arterial pressures ?110 mmHg during the initial three postoperative days by maintaining adequate hydration, using inotropic and chronotropic drugs, and vasopressor as necessary. This protocol specifies the blood pressure target but leaves implementation to clinical judgement. Routine pressure management: In patients assigned to routine pressure management, ACEIs, ARBs, and/or calcium channel blockers can be given the morning of surgery if deemed appropriate by the attending anesthesiologist. The arterial catheter will be inserted before or after induction of anesthesia per clinician preference. General anesthesia will be induced and maintained per routine. Blood pressure will not be deliberately reduced, but per routine clinicians will presumably not intervene until MAP is <65 mmHg. As usual, chronic anti-hypertensive medications will be restarted shortly after surgery unless contraindicated by hypotension. In both groups, other aspects of anesthetic management will be at the discretion of the responsible anesthesiologist, including the types and volumes of various fluids. Volatile or intravenous anesthesia is permitted. There will be no limitation on ancillary vasoactive, chronotropic, and inotropic drugs. Clinicians will be free to use advanced hemodynamic monitoring (e.g., pulse-wave analysis, esophageal Doppler, etc.). Blood products will be given per routine. Similarly, postoperative analgesic management will be per routine and clinician preference. Neuraxial and peripheral nerve blocks are permitted, but epidural catheters should not be activated until surgery is nearly finished. Because patients must be fairly sick to qualify for GUARDIAN, some will go to directly from surgery to critical care units, or much less often, become unstable and require transfer from a routine ward to an ICU. In either case, every effort will be to maintain randomized treatments and blood pressure targets. In all cases, good judgement will predominate. Clinicians should always act in their patients' best interests, irrespective of the GUARDIAN protocol

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04884802
Collaborators
Not Provided
Investigators
Study Chair: Daniel I Sessler, MD The Cleveland Clinic