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The Application of Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) for Cardiovascular Surgery in the Correction of Complex Congenital Heart Disease

Not Applicable
Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Enhanced Recovery After Surgery
Complex Congenital Heart Disease
Interventions
Procedure: ERAS
Registration Number
NCT05914103
Lead Sponsor
Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Fuwai Hospital
Brief Summary

This study is a multicenter, stepwise design, cluster randomized controlled trial. Random sequence is generated by computer, and each center enters the intervention expectation (Phase I) in random order to implement ERAS strategy. If it does not enter the intervention expectation (Phase C) center, clinical diagnosis and treatment will be completed according to the traditional scheme.

Among children, patients aged 28 to 6 who underwent cardiac surgery were included in the ERAS strategy intervention plan, which mainly includes preoperative education, preoperative comfort for the patient, preoperative oral sugary beverage, continuous infusion of dexmedetomidine, multimodal analgesia, blood protection strategies, prevention of postoperative nausea and vomiting, intraoperative insulation, early tracheal extubation and intubation, and targeted liquid therapy. The traditional plan group follows the current clinical diagnosis and treatment routine. By comparing the differences in the incidence of major postoperative outcomes (MACE events, major pulmonary complications, and acute kidney injury) between the intervention group and the non intervention group, as well as comparing other adverse events (including but not limited to pneumonia, massive bleeding, postoperative arrhythmia, incision infection, postoperative nausea, vomiting, and delirium), all cause secondary intubation, and all cause secondary surgery between the two groups, and recording hospitalization time, ICU stay time The removal time of tracheal intubation and drainage tube, the pain score during hospitalization, the total amount of opioid drug use (converted to the same dose of morphine), hospitalization expenses, and family satisfaction scores were recorded to explore whether the ERAS regimen can reduce the incidence of major postoperative adverse events, improve patient prognosis, and accelerate postoperative recovery compared to traditional regimens.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
3030
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patients aged 28 days to 6 years
  • Patients awaiting elective cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB).
Exclusion Criteria
  • The risk adjustment for congenital heart surgery (RACHS) is above class 5
  • Patients with cardiac assist device, mechanical ventilation or the history of asphyxia
  • Patients with pulmonary disease, including respiratory tract infections and asthma
  • Patients with severe liver or renal dysfunction, including severe acute or chronic renal dysfunction need renal replacement therapy, and acute or chronic liver failure need artificial liver therapy
  • Fetal malformation includes polysplenia syndrome, Asplenia Syndrome, Down syndrome, DiGeoge syndrome, Marfan syndrome, trachea-bronchus stricture, diabetes, nervous functioning disorders, genital system malformations, imperforate anus, and Williams syndrome
  • Current enrollment in another clinical trial
  • Guardian's refusal or low adherence

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
InterventionERAS-
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
composite outcomesduring hospitalization, an average of 1 week, assessed up to 30 days

The composite outcomes include the major adverse cardiac events (MACE), major postoperative pulmonary complication (PPCs), and acute kidney injury (AKI)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
overall medical costsduring hospitalization, an average of 1 week, assessed up to 30 days

Total cost of patients during hospitalization

cumulative opioid dosageduring hospitalization, an average of 1 week, assessed up to 30 days

Total perioperative consumption of opioid analgesics

time to extubationThe time from the end of operation to the removal of tracheal intubation, assessed up to 30 days

The time from the end of operation to the removal of tracheal intubation

time to drainage removalThe time from the end of operation to the removal of drainage tube, assessed up to 30 days

The time from the end of operation to the removal of drainage tube

the rate of other complicationsduring hospitalization, an average of 1 week, assessed up to 30 days

The rate of other complications include delium, pneumonia, pneumothorax, hematorrhea and so on

the duration of intensive care unit (ICU) stayTime from ICU admission to ICU discharge, assessed up to 30 days

Time from ICU admission to ICU discharge

the rate of reintubation for any causeduring hospitalization, an average of 1 week, assessed up to 30 days

The rate of reintubation for any cause

length of hospital stayFrom the date of admission until the date of discharging, assessed up to 30 days

From the date of admission until the date of discharging

Satisfaction scorethe day before discharge, assessed up to 30 days

A satisfaction rating using a 0-10 number scale (0=unsatisfactory, 10=satisfactory)

the cumulative incidence of death from any cause within 30 days and 1 yearwithin 30 days and 1 year

the cumulative incidence of death from any cause within 30 days and 1 year

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Fuwai hospital

🇨🇳

China, Beijing, China

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