CI

At a glance

ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
N/ACompleted· 1,272 enrolled
Drug / intervention
Personalized blood pressure managementother
Likely dose
Not stated in record
Structured eligibility isn't available for this trial yet — see the full criteria in the Eligibility tab below.

Standardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.

Search/NCT05416944
NCT05416944N/ACompleted

Effect of Personalized Perioperative Blood Pressure Management on Postoperative Complications and Mortality in High-risk Patients Having Major Abdominal Surgery: a Multicenter Prospective Randomized Controlled Interventional Clinical Trial

Universitätsklinikum Hamburg-Eppendorf·interventional·Posted Jun 14, 2022·Updated Dec 11, 2024

In Brief

A clinical study evaluating Personalized blood pressure management for Blood Pressure and 4 related conditions. Completed, enrolled 1,272 participants across 1 site.

Detailed Summary

Rates of major complications and mortality in the first weeks after surgery remain very high: postoperative mortality is still around 2% in central Europe and the United States. Postoperative deaths are a consequence of postoperative complications. Postoperative complications that are most strongly associated with postoperative death include acute kidney injury and acute myocardial injury. To avoid postoperative complications it is thus crucial to identify and address modifiable risk factors for complications. One of these modifiable risk factors may be intraoperative hypotension. Intraoperative hypotension is associated with major postoperative complications including acute kidney injury, acute myocardial injury, and death. It remains unknown which blood pressure value should be targeted in the individual patient during surgery to avoid physiologically important intraoperative hypotension. In current clinical practice, an absolute mean arterial pressure threshold of 65mmHg is used as a lower "one-size-fits-all" intervention threshold. This "population harm threshold" is based on the results of retrospective studies. However, using this population harm threshold for all patients ignores the obvious fact that blood pressure varies considerably among individuals. In contrast to current "one-size-fits-all" perioperative blood pressure management, the investigators propose the concept of personalized perioperative blood pressure management. Specifically, the investigators propose to test the hypothesis that personalized perioperative blood pressure management reduces the incidence of a composite outcome of acute kidney injury, acute myocardial injury, non-fatal cardiac arrest, and death within 7 days after surgery compared to routine blood pressure management in high-risk patients having major abdominal surgery. The investigators will perform preoperative automated blood pressure monitoring for one night to define individual intraoperative blood pressure targets. Automated blood pressure monitoring is the clinical reference method to assess blood pressure profiles. The mission of the trial is to reduce postoperative morbidity and mortality after major surgery. The vision is to achieve this improvement in patient outcome by using the innovative concept of personalized perioperative blood pressure management. This trial is expected to change and improve current clinical practice and will have a direct impact on perioperative blood pressure management guidelines.

Study Details

Study Typeinterventional
Allocation--
Masking--
Primary Purpose--
CountriesGermany

Timeline

N/ACompletedFinished
2023202420252026
First PostedJun 14, 2022
Enrollment StartFeb 26, 2023
Primary CompletionMay 25, 2024
Study CompletionJul 25, 2024
TodayJul 2, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 1.2 yearsPosted 4.0 years ago

Interventions

Personalized blood pressure managementother

Personalized blood pressure management: Intraoperative mean arterial pressure will be maintained at least at the mean nighttime mean arterial pressure (assessed using preoperative automated blood pressure monitoring) with a minimum mean arterial pressure of 65 mmHg, and maximum mean arterial pressure of 110 mmHg.