Assisted Fluid Management (AFM) System and Postoperative Outcome After High-risk Abdominal Surgery
a study on Decision Support System Outcome
Summary
- Eligibility
- for people ages 18 years and up (full criteria)
- Location
- at UC Irvine UCLA
- Dates
- study startedcompletion around
- Principal Investigator
- by Joseph Rinehart, MD (uci)David BOLDT, MD (ucla)
Description
Summary
Goal directed fluid therapy (GDFT) or "Personalized fluid therapy" may benefit high-risk surgical patients but these strategies are infrequently implemented. It has also been shown that without any goal or protocol for fluid resuscitation, large inter- and intra-provider variability exist that have been correlated with poor patient outcomes.
Recently, an "Assisted Fluid Management" (AFM) system has been developed to help ease some of the work associated with GDFT protocol implementation. The AFM system may help increase GDFT protocol adherence while leaving direction and guidance in the hands of the care providers. This artificial intelligence-based system can suggest administration of fluid boluses, analyse the hemodynamic effects of the bolus, and continually re-assess the patient for further fluid requirements.
To date, there are no large outcome study using this AFM system. The primary objective of this trial is thus to evaluate the impact of this AFM system to guide fluid bolus administration on a composite of major postoperative complications in high-risk patients undergoing high-risk abdominal surgery.
Official Title
"Personalized Fluid Administration Using an AFM System for Goal Directed Fluid Therapy on Postoperative Outcome in High-risk Patients Undergoing High-risk Abdominal Surgery: A Multicenter Stepped-wedge, Cluster-randomized Clinical Trial
Details
Many trials have indicated that goal-directed fluid therapy (GDFT) strategies or more recently "personalized fluid therapy" may benefit high-risk surgical patients but these strategies are infrequently implemented. It has also been shown that without any goal or protocol for fluid resuscitation, large inter- and intra-provider variability exist that have been correlated with poor patient outcomes. Even under ideal study conditions, strict adherence to GDFT protocols is hampered by the workload and concentration required for consistent implementation. Hemodynamic monitors and protocols alone do not enable optimal fluid titration to be provided consistently to all patients - there must also be appropriate and timely interpretation and intervention.
To address this problem of consistency and protocol adherence, a decision support system, "Assisted Fluid Management" (AFM), has been developed to help ease some of the work associated with GDFT protocol implementation. The AFM system (released on the European market in March 2017) may help increase GDFT protocol adherence while leaving direction and guidance in the hands of the care providers. This artificial intelligence-based system can suggest administration of fluid boluses, analyse the hemodynamic effects of the bolus, and continually re-assess the patient for further fluid requirements.
This system was recently implemented in a before-and-after study in a Belgian academic hospital, where the authors reported that the implementation of this AFM software system allowed a better adherence to the GDFT algorithm. However, as this was a pilot study with a small number of patients, the study was not powered to demonstrate a beneficial effect on the incidence of postoperative complications. More recently, a group from the Cleveland Clinic demonstrated that using AFM system resulted in more boluses being effective when compared to the administration of boluses without AFM support.
There are no randomized controlled studies to date comparing this AFM system to standard of care on patient outcome. We therefore aim to conduct a multicenter stepped-wedge, cluster-randomized trial involving patients undergoing high risk abdominal surgery to compare a GDFT strategy guided by the AFM system with usual care.
A stepped wedge, cluster-randomized trial approach was chosen in which clusters will be randomized to commence the intervention at different times following an initial control period in which outcomes will be measured for usual care.
So, each center (cluster) began in the control phase and transitioned to the intervention phase at a randomly assigned time (wedge). The order in which each center will move from control to intervention phase will be randomly allocated by a computer algorithm performed by the study statistician.
We selected cluster randomization rather than randomization of individual patients because the control group could be very different among centers (from GDFT strategy using a flow monitoring to GDFT with a written protocol to no clear strategy (use of an arterial line only without any advanced monitoring). Interestingly, this approach also decreases the Hawthorne effect which has been shown to decrease the incidence rate of the primary outcome in recent randomized trials because clinicians know that their patients are included in a research protocol.
Keywords
Decision Support System, Outcome, hemodynamic, fluid administration, postoperative complications, Routine care, AFM, Assisted fluid management system
Eligibility
You can join if…
Open to people ages 18 years and up
- Any adult patient (aged 18 years or older) admitted to the operating room for an elective high-risk abdominal surgery (both open and laparoscopically assisted).
- Patients must fulfill at least one of the following high-risk criteria:
- American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status > 2
- classification exercise tolerance < 4 metabolic equivalents as defined by the guidelines of the American College of Cardiology/ American Heart Association
- renal impairment (serum creatinine ≥1.3mg/dL or >115 mmol/l or estimated glomerular filtration rate < 90 mL/min/1.73 m2 within the last 6 months) or renal replacement therapy
- coronary artery disease (any stage)
- chronic heart failure (New York Heart Association Functional Classifcation ≥ II)
- valvular heart disease (moderate or severe);
- history of stroke
- peripheral arterial occlusive disease (any stage)
- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (any stage) or pulmonary fibrosis (any stage)
- diabetes mellitus requiring oral hypoglycemic agent or insulin; immunodeficiency due to a disease (e.g., HIV, leukemia, multiple myeloma, solid organ cancer) or therapy (e.g., immunosuppressants, chemotherapy, radiation, steroids)
liver cirrhosis (any Child-Pugh class)
-- body mass index ≥30 kg/m2
- current smoking or 15 pack-year history of smoking
- All participants must receive clear study information and give signed informed consent
You CAN'T join if...
- Patients with preoperative cardiac arrhythmias (atrial fibrillation) as the monitoring devices are not accurate under cardiac arrhythmias.
- No affiliation with the French health care system
- Patients participating in another randomized controlled trial with the same clinical endpoint, or interventions possibly compromising the primary outcome.
- Pregnant patients
- Patient on AME (state medical aid) (unless exemption from affiliation)
- Patients guardianship/legal protection/curatorship
Locations
- University of California IRVINE
not yet accepting patients
Irvine California 92868 United States - University of California Los Angeles (UCLA)
not yet accepting patients
Los Angeles California 90095 United States - Centre chirurgical Marie Lannelongue
accepting new patients
Le Plessis-Robinson Haut De Seine France - BICETRE
accepting new patients
Le Kremlin-Bicêtre Paris France - CHU Clermont-Ferrand
currently not accepting new patients, but might later
Clermont-Ferrand France - Chu Dijon
accepting new patients
Dijon France - ALEXANDRE JOOSTEN, MD PhD
accepting new patients
Le Kremlin-Bicêtre 94200 France - Chu Lille
accepting new patients
Lille France - Centre hospitalier universitaire de NANCY
accepting new patients
Nancy France - BEAUJON
accepting new patients
Paris France
Lead Scientists at University of California Health
- Joseph Rinehart, MD (uci)
Health Sciences Professor, Anesthesiology and Perioperative Care, School of Medicine. Authored (or co-authored) 79 research publications - David BOLDT, MD (ucla)
Hs Clinical Professor, Anesthesiology, Medicine. Authored (or co-authored) 11 research publications
Details
- Status
- accepting new patients at some sites,
but this study is not currently recruiting here - Start Date
- Completion Date
- (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
- ID
- NCT06011187
- Study Type
- Interventional
- Participants
- Expecting 2000 study participants
- Last Updated