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Closed Loop Propofol Administration in Pediatric Cardiac Surgery

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Pediatric Cardiac Surgery
Intraoperative Awareness
Automated Drug Delivery
Interventions
Other: IAADS
Other: Manual propofol administration
Registration Number
NCT01600287
Lead Sponsor
Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh
Brief Summary

The purpose of the study is to evaluate and compare the feasibility, efficacy and safety of IAADS (Improved Anaesthetic Agent Delivery System) for propofol anaesthesia against manual control using bispectral index in paediatric patients undergoing open heart surgery under cardio-pulmonary bypass.

Detailed Description

Automated drug delivery has gained considerable interest in recent times. It is carried out by specially programmed electro-mechanical devices where dose rate adjustment is made independent of human intervention. The desired target is chosen by the clinician. The closed loop system depends upon a feedback signal to modify the rate of drug delivery. These have an advantage that they are able to overcome the individual pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic differences as well as the differing levels of surgical stimulation. Majority of studies on closed loop delivery of hypnotics has been done using propofol. CLADS(Closed loop anesthesia delivery system) is a BIS guided closed loop anaesthesia delivery system developed at PGIMER (Post graduate institute of medical education and research), Chandigarh and has been used successfully for administration of propofol in various situations, eg, non-cardiac surgery, cardiac surgery, post-operative sedation and high altitude. The system used will be IAADS, Improved anesthetic agent delivery system - the present and updated version of CLADS), a pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model based adaptive system . There are only a few studies/reports regarding closed loop delivery of muscle relaxants in children. In this study, the efficacy of IAADS will be compared with manual control for administration of propofol using BIS as a control variable during induction and maintenance of anaesthesia in children undergoing elective open heart surgery.

After approval from the Institutional ethics committee and written informed parental consent, 40 children, aged 5-18 years and ASA physical status II-III, planned for elective open heart surgery under general anaesthesia will be studied. Patients will be randomly allocated to one of two groups - the manual group and the IAADS group using computer-generated random numbers in sealed opaque envelopes. Exclusion criteria will be: patients weighing more than ±30% of ideal body weight, those with neurological/psychological disorders, on psychoactive medications, belonging to NYHA class IV, those with severe stenotic valvular lesions, with known allergy to propofol or any of its constituents, having severe pulmonary arterial hypertension, with cyanotic congenital heart disease and those who may require deep hypothermic circulatory arrest for repair. The investigator will be present during the procedure for data collection purpose only and was not involved in the conduct of anaesthesia. Patients will be premedicated with oral midazolam syrup 0.25mg/kg 30 minutes before shifting to operating room. EMLA cream will be applied to the site of venipuncture for at least one hour. Intravenous access will be obtained in the operating room. Routine physiological monitoring will be commenced (pulse oximetry, electrocardiography, non-invasive blood pressure). BIS will be obtained by disposable sensors (Aspect Medical System Inc. MA USA) attached to the forehead of the patients. The children resisting venous cannula placement will be excluded from the study and subjected to inhalational induction.

Before induction, patients will receive fentanyl 3µg/kg over three minutes. In automatic mode, IAADS will calculate and titrate the initial and subsequent propofol infusion rate according to the weight of the patient, the risk status, the target BIS value which will be set at 50 for all cases. In manual mode, infusion rate will be determined by the attending anaesthesiologist according to the weight of the patient and target BIS of 50, with the aim to maintain BIS within 40-60. After loss of consciousness, patients will receive 0.1mg/kg of vecuronium bromide and trachea will be intubated after 4 minutes. The lungs will be ventilated with 100% O2; tidal volume and respiratory rate will be adjusted to maintain an EtCO2 of 30-35 mm Hg. Central venous catheter and arterial cannula will be inserted subsequently.

Analgesia will be maintained with infusion of fentanyl at 1µg/kg/hr and additional boluses of 1µg/kg will be administered before skin incision, sternotomy and commencement of cardio-pulmonary bypass. Muscle relaxation will be maintained with vecuronium bromide. Tachycardia and hypertension will be treated with fentanyl bolus, esmolol, nitroglycerine as appropriate. Hypotension will be treated with fluid bolus, phenylephrine, inotropes as appropriate. Significant bradycardia will be treated with atropine sulphate. During CPB, infusion of fentanyl and propofol will be continued. MAP will be maintained between 30-50 mm Hg and any deviation from these limits will be treated with phenylephrine boluses or nitroglycerine infusion. Propofol will be administered as per IAADS protocol in automatic group and manually in control group. The number of times propofol infusion rate that will needed to be changed in the manual group will be noted.

After skin closure, fentanyl and propofol infusion will be stopped, study protocol will be terminated and the patients will be shifted to ICU without antagonizing the muscle relaxant for elective mechanical ventilation. Patients will be given propofol infusion for postoperative sedation and will be extubated when standard criteria for weaning and extubation will be met. The children will be subjected to a structured interview as described by Lopez et a for conscious awareness; on second day after surgery and approximately one month later.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
40
Inclusion Criteria
  • Children, aged 5-18 years and ASA (American Society of Anesthesiology) physical status 2-3, planned for elective open heart surgery under general anaesthesia.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Patients weighing more than ±30% of ideal body weight.
  • Patients having neurological/psychological disorders or on psychoactive medications.
  • Patients belonging to NYHA (New York Heart Association) class IV.
  • Patients with severe stenotic valvular lesions, eg, mitral or aortic stenosis.
  • Patients with known allergy to propofol or any of its constituents.
  • Patients having severe pulmonary arterial hypertension.
  • Patients with cyanotic congenital heart disease.
  • Patients requiring deep hypothermic circulatory arrest during surgery.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
IAADS groupIAADSdosage of propofol adjusted automatically by IAADS
Manual groupManual propofol administrationdosage of propofol adjusted manually
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Percentage of Time Bispectral Index(BIS) Remains+/-10 of TargetApproximately 8 hours

The primary outcome to be measured is the ability of the system to keep the depth of anesthesia in the target range, i.e, Bispectral Index(BIS) value of 50+/- 10. This will assess the ability of the system to prevent intra-operative awareness of the patients and at the same time avoid excessive depth of anesthesia with its accompanying adverse effects.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Median Absolute Performance Error(MDAPE)Approximately 8 hours

The difference between the observed and target of measure of depth of anesthesia (BIS) expressed as percentage of target BIS is calculated as performance error every 30 seconds. This value may be either '+' or '_' indicating whether the observed measure is above the target (overshoot-+) or below the target (undershoot-_).The median of the absolute values of performance errors (without considering the direction of error) is median absolute performance error. This outcome measures the magnitude of error or inaccuracy of the system studied. A lower value indicates a more precise system.This outcome is expressed as the mean of Median Absolute Performance Errors per participant.

WobbleApproximately 8 hours

Wobble measures the intra-individual variability in performance error.The median of the difference between individual performance errors throughout anesthesia and the median performance error for each participant is the wobble of that participant. The mean value per participant is indicated in the outcome measure.

Percentage of Time Heart Rate Remains Within 25% of Pre-op BaselineApproximately 8 hours

The duration of time heart rate remains within 25% of the pre-operative baseline value during the period propofol (general anesthetic) is administered to the study population. This value is expressed as a percentage. This outcome is expressed as the mean of percentage of time per participant.

Median Performance Error(MDPE)Approximately 8 hours

The difference between the observed and target of measure of depth of anesthesia (BIS) expressed as percentage of target BIS is calculated as performance error every 30 seconds. This value may be either '+' or '_' indicating whether the observed measure is above the target (overshoot-+) or below the target (undershoot-_). The median value of all performance errors during propofol anesthesia is median performance error and is a measure of bias of the system. This outcome is expressed as the mean of Median Performance Errors per participant.

Percentage of Time Mean Arterial Pressure Remains Within 25% of Pre-op BaselineApproximately 8 hours

The duration of time mean arterial pressure remains within 25% of the pre-operative baseline value during the period propofol (general anesthetic) is administered to the study population. This value is expressed as percentage. This outcome is expressed as the mean of percentage of time per participant

Intra-operative AwarenessApproximately 3 days and then 1 month later

The number of patients who will be able to recall the intra-operative events when assessed postoperatively. This will be assessed by a structured protocol

Divergence8 hours (approx)

slope of the linear regression curve of performance error against time.

Global Score8 hours (approx)

overall performance assessment of the system calculated as= \[(MDAPE+Wobble)/percentage of time BIS remains within target\]x100 Lower score indicates better overall performance

Intraoperative Phenylephrine Used (Pre CPB)2 hours(approx)

total phenylephrine dose needed to be used in the pre CPB period to maintain hemodynamic stability

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Advanced Cardiac Centre.Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research.

🇮🇳

Chandigarh, India

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