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Clinical Trials/NCT01850927
NCT01850927
Completed
N/A

Effect of Remote Ischemic Preconditioning on Subclinical Myocardial Injury in Major Abdominal Surgery: a Randomised Controlled Trial

London Surgical Research Group1 site in 1 country84 target enrollmentJune 2013

Overview

Phase
N/A
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Perioperative Myocardial Injury
Sponsor
London Surgical Research Group
Enrollment
84
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Peak post-operative troponin (ng/L)
Status
Completed
Last Updated
8 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Recent data suggests that subclinical myocardial injury occurs in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery, and the degree of damage is proportionally linked to morbidity and mortality in the short and medium terms. Therefore, new methods of limiting myocardial damage are urgently needed.

Ischemic preconditioning is a phenomenon whereby a brief non-lethal ischemia-reperfusion stimulus gives a protective effect to further ischemic insults. In remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC), this initial stimulus is carried out away from the region of interest, normally a limb. In meta-analysed syntheses the effect size of RIPC in reducing cardiac damage during bypass grafting, as characterised by troponin release, seems to be about 35%.

The PRIME Study will assess the value of RIPC in reducing subclinical myocardial injury in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery. Post-operative troponin release will be used as a surrogate marker of myocardial damage. There is no good data on which to build a reliable sample size calculation, therefore we estimated samples sizes using supplementary data from the recent VISION study. The investigators intend to build a clinically powered study from the results of this study.

Study design will be by single-centre single-blind randomised control trial. Allocation will be 1:1. All treatments will be carried after induction of anaesthesia, prior to surgery. In the RIPC-treatment group, a blood pressure cuff inflated on an upper limb to 200mmHg for 5 minutes, and then deflated for 5 minutes, repeated in three cycles. In the control group, the blood pressure cuff will not be inflated, but the patient will remain under anaesthesia for the same amount of time.

Primary endpoint will be peak post-operative 5th generation hs-TnT (highly sensitive Troponin-T, ng/ml). Secondary endpoint will be hs-TnT area-under-the-curve, major adverse cardiovascular events, serious surgical complications, non-cardiovascular death, quality of life, and length of stay.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
June 2013
End Date
March 2017
Last Updated
8 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
London Surgical Research Group
Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • is ≥ 45 years old;
  • is undergoing elective major colorectal or upper GI surgery.
  • Exclusion Criteria
  • Diabetic patients that are taking glibenclamide medication
  • Patients with upper limb peripheral vascular disease, including those with arteriovenous fistula for dialysis
  • Untreated hypertension (defined as two or more readings \>180mmHg systolic on admission for surgery)
  • Current participation in any study investigating troponin levels or ischaemic preconditioning
  • Unable or lacks capacity to give informed consent to participation

Exclusion Criteria

  • Not provided

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Peak post-operative troponin (ng/L)

Time Frame: At 6-12, 24, 48, 72h

Secondary Outcomes

  • Any serious surgical complications(30 days)
  • Area-under-the-curve post-operative troponin (ng/L)(72 hours)
  • Positive post-operative troponin (binary endpoint, >20ng/L)(72 hours)
  • Any major adverse cardiovascular events(30 days)

Study Sites (1)

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