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Trial Title:
Dexmedetomidine Infusion on Intraoperative Propofol,Fentanyl Requirements in Spine Surgery for Pediatric Cancer Patients
NCT ID:
NCT05493228
Condition:
Spine Cancer
Anesthesia
Conditions: Official terms:
Dexmedetomidine
Study type:
Interventional
Study phase:
Phase 3
Overall status:
Unknown status
Study design:
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention model:
Parallel Assignment
Intervention model description:
A prospective, randomized, double-blinded clinical trial will be done on all included
cases. They will be divided into two groups after induction of general anathesia using
propofolwhich will be started at 100 ug/kg/min) and titrated to maintain the bispectral
index at 40-60 and fentanyl will be started at 0.5ug/kg/min) and to be adjusted as needed
to control the hemodynamic response to the surgical procedure and maintain the mean
arterial pressure (MAP) at 55-65 mmHg. Then will randomly divided using Block Stratified
Randomized Software program, after obtaining informed consent from eligible patient or
his caregiver into two Arms:
Arm A: will receive dexmedetomidine infusion at the rate of 0.5 μg kg-1 hr-1, started
after the induction of general anesthesia without a loading dose which is colorless
solution.
Arm B :will receive placebo (saline injection) only after the induction of general
anesthesia
Primary purpose:
Prevention
Masking:
Triple (Participant, Care Provider, Investigator)
Masking description:
The PI (anesthesiologist), neurosurgeon ,patient, all assisting surgeons and
anesthesiologist as well operating and circulating nurse will be blinded to the study arm
to which patient belongs to. Only clinical trial unit and pharmacist will be unblinded.
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Drug
Intervention name:
Precedex Injectable Product
Description:
Precedex activates 2-adrenoceptors, and causes the decrease of sympathetic tone, with
attenuation of the neuroendocrine and hemodynamic responses to anesthesia and surgery; it
reduces anesthetic and opioid requirements; and causes sedation and analgesia. it is used
before and/or during surgical
Arm group label:
patient is receiving dexmedetomidine
Other name:
dexmedetomidine
Intervention type:
Drug
Intervention name:
Saline
Description:
mixture of sodium chloride (salt) and water in solution with 0.90% w/v of NaCl
Arm group label:
standard treatment (saline)
Other name:
Salt water
Summary:
The purpose of this trial is to investigate whether the effect of a low-dose
dexmedetomidine infusion will decrease propofol consumption or not through a double
blinded randomized controlled trial done in children cancer hospital 57357.
Detailed description:
Spinal surgery with instrumentation is associated with the risk of iatrogenic injuries to
the spinal cord. The combination of somatosensory evoked potential (SSEP) and
transcranial electric motor evoked potential (tcemep) monitoring has resulted in a high
degree of sensitivity in predicting postoperative neurologic outcomes. Anesthetic agents
have a dose-dependent adverse effect on the ability to record evoked potential responses.
Many commonly used anesthetic agents produce a dose-dependent amplitude reduction and
latency prolongation of evoked responses, which may impair diagnosis of intraoperative
spinal cord injury. Neuroprotection is the cornerstone of anesthetic management in
neurosurgery. Preserving the quality of SSEP and motor evoked potential (MEP) and
minimizing the effects of anesthetic agents on neurologic monitoring are thus
investigators' priorities.
Motor-evoked potential (MEP) and somatosensory-evoked potential (SSEP) monitoring are
universally used during spine surgeries, which poses risks to the functional integrity of
descending motor and ascending sensory pathways.
MEP baseline recording is obtained at the start of surgery determining the amplitude. The
alarming criteria for MEP are attenuation of more than 50 % in motor response amplitude
for segmental tcMEP, more than 80 % for long tract tcMEP and/or abolishment of tcMEP
data. Any significant change is immediately reported to the surgeons.
Prior to skin incision, SSEP baseline amplitude and latency of cortical potential peaks
were recorded (N20 for upper SSEP and P37 for lower SSEP). The alarming criteria of SSEP
are 50% decreased amplitude and/or more than 10% increased latency compared to baseline.
The anesthetic agents have effects on the latency and amplitude of MEP and SSEP
monitoring which is dose-dependent. Total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA) with propofol and
opioid is commonly recommended for surgeries that require MEP and SSEP monitoring.
However, propofol administered with a large dose affects MEP monitoring.
Using dexmedetomidine has the ability of sparing hypnotics usage, especially propofol,
thus facilitating MEP and SSEP monitoring with providing its beneficial effects.
The addition of dexmedetomidine (0.5 μg/kg loading dose infused over 10 min followed by a
constant infusion rate of 0.5 μg/kg/h) to propofol-remifentanil regimen does not exert an
adverse effect on MEP and SSEP monitoring in adult patients undergoing thoracic spinal
cord tumor resection and the addition of dexmedetomidine reduces the propofol
requirements for a comparable BIS measurement. Another study that supports this regimen
concluded that SEPs and MEPs were maintained in the patients who are administered with
the dexmedetomidine etomidate fentanyl combined anesthesia during spinal surgery. Also,
it was find that dexmedetomidine changes SSEP amplitude at clinically nonsignificant
levels and may be safely used in intraoperative nerve monitoring at up to 1.2mg/ kg/h .
The most attractive form of display for the calculated power spectrum during anaesthesia
is the compressed spectral array (CSA), where the component power is plotted as a
function of frequency for each analysed epoch. Power spectrum analysis and subsequent
display of data in the CSA format provide a simplified identification of small changes in
a complex EEG.
Total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA) with propofol and opioid is commonly recommended for
surgeries that require MEP and SSEP monitoring. However, even propofol used with a large
dose can also affect MEP monitoring. Despite its efficacy, dose-related adverse effects
may occur with propofol including prolonged awakening times, lipemia, and alteration of
platelet function. Additionally, although more of a concern with its prolonged use in the
ICU setting, recent attention has focused on the potential development of the 'propofol
infusion syndrome' during intraoperative care.
Dexmedetomidine, an alpha 2-receptor agonist, is routinely used to provide analgesia and
sedation without respiratory depression in critically ill patients. Its hemodynamic
stability, negligible respiratory depression, and reduction of other anesthetic and
analgesic requirements make it an interesting option for intraoperative use as an
adjunctive agent for general anesthesia .When dexmedetomidine is added to a propofol
infusion, it decreases the dose of propofol required,provides moderate hypotension,
decreases blood loss, and allows monitoring of MEPs and SSEPs. The dose of
dexmedetomidine often quoted in the literature is a bolus of 1 μg kg-1 hr-1 over 10 min
followed by infusion of 0.2-0.7 μg kg-1 hr-1, but this dose frequently results in
bradycardia and hypotension. Recently,this study is planned to evaluate the effects of
intraoperative IV infusion of a low-dose (0.5 μg kg-1 hr-1) dexmedetomidine in patients
undergoing spine surgery.
Researchers have administered an intraoperative continuous infusion of lower doses of
dexmedetomidine without a prior bolus.
Criteria for eligibility:
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- spinal cord tumor resection based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies.
- age between 5 -18 years old
- American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status II or III.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Emergency spine surgery
- Cardiac patients
- Any individual with stage 4 or greater chronic kidney disease (eGFR< 30 ml/min)
and/or requiring dialysis
- liver failure defined as a history of cirrhosis or fulminant hepatic failure
- Preoperative dexmethatodine use
- Preoperative systolic hypertension defined by a systolic blood pressure greater than
130 mmHg in the surgical admission suite
- Enrolled in another study within 30 days.
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
5 Years
Maximum age:
18 Years
Healthy volunteers:
No
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
Children's Cancer Hospital Egypt 57357 Cairo, Egypt
Address:
City:
Cairo
Country:
Egypt
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
dina M elgalaly, bph
Phone:
01154021119
Phone ext:
7209
Email:
delgalaly@gmail.com
Investigator:
Last name:
suzan M adlan, MD
Email:
Principal Investigator
Start date:
May 17, 2022
Completion date:
October 30, 2023
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
Children's Cancer Hospital Egypt 57357
Agency class:
Other
Source:
Children's Cancer Hospital Egypt 57357
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05493228