Plummer Zoe E, Baos Sarah, Rogers Chris A, Suleiman M-Saadeh, Bryan Alan J, Angelini Gianni D, Hillier James, Downes Richard, Nicholson Eamonn, Reeves Barnaby C
Clinical Trials and Evaluation Unit, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2014 Jul 8;3(3):e35. doi: 10.2196/resprot.3353.
Despite improved myocardial protection strategies, cardioplegic arrest and ischemia still result in reperfusion injury. We have previously published a study describing the effects of propofol (an anesthetic agent commonly used in cardiac surgery) on metabolic stress, cardiac function, and injury in a clinically relevant animal model. We concluded that cardioplegia supplementation with propofol at a concentration relevant to the human clinical setting resulted in improved hemodynamic function, reduced oxidative stress, and reduced reperfusion injury when compared to standard cardioplegia.
The Propofol cardioplegia for Myocardial Protection Trial (ProMPT) aims to translate the successful animal intervention to the human clinical setting. We aim to test the hypothesis that supplementation of the cardioplegic solution with propofol will be cardioprotective for patients undergoing isolated coronary artery bypass graft or aortic valve replacement surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass.
The trial is a single-center, placebo-controlled, randomized trial with blinding of participants, health care staff, and the research team. Patients aged between 18 and 80 years undergoing nonemergency isolated coronary artery bypass graft or aortic valve replacement surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass at the Bristol Heart Institute are being invited to participate. Participants are randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to either cardioplegia supplementation with propofol (intervention) or cardioplegia supplementation with intralipid (placebo) using a secure, concealed, Internet-based randomization system. Randomization is stratified by operation type and minimized by diabetes mellitus status. Biomarkers of cardiac injury and metabolism are being assessed to investigate any cardioprotection conferred. The primary outcome is myocardial injury, studied by measuring myocardial troponin T. The trial is designed to test hypotheses about the superiority of the intervention within each surgical stratum. The sample size of 96 participants has been chosen to achieve 80% power to detect standardized differences of 0.5 at a significance level of 5% (2-tailed) assuming equal numbers in each surgical stratum.
A total of 96 patients have been successfully recruited over a 2-year period. Results are to be published in late 2014.
Designing a practicable method for delivering a potentially protective dose of propofol to the heart during cardiac surgery was challenging. If our approach confirms the potential of propofol to reduce damage during cardiac surgery, we plan to design a larger multicenter trial to detect differences in clinical outcomes.
International Standard Randomized Controlled Trial Number (ISRCTN): 84968882; http://www.controlled-trials.com/ISRCTN84968882/ProMPT (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6Qi8A51BS).
尽管心肌保护策略有所改进,但心脏停搏和缺血仍会导致再灌注损伤。我们之前发表过一项研究,描述了丙泊酚(心脏手术中常用的一种麻醉剂)在一个临床相关动物模型中对代谢应激、心脏功能和损伤的影响。我们得出结论,与标准心脏停搏液相比,在与人体临床环境相关的浓度下用丙泊酚补充心脏停搏液可改善血流动力学功能、降低氧化应激并减少再灌注损伤。
丙泊酚心脏停搏液心肌保护试验(ProMPT)旨在将成功的动物干预措施转化到人体临床环境。我们旨在检验这样一个假设,即向心脏停搏液中补充丙泊酚对接受非体外循环下孤立冠状动脉搭桥术或主动脉瓣置换术的患者具有心脏保护作用。
该试验是一项单中心、安慰剂对照、随机试验,对参与者、医护人员和研究团队进行了盲法处理。正在邀请年龄在18至80岁之间、在布里斯托尔心脏研究所接受非急诊非体外循环下孤立冠状动脉搭桥术或主动脉瓣置换术的患者参与。参与者使用一个安全、隐蔽的基于互联网的随机化系统,以1:1的比例随机分配到用丙泊酚补充心脏停搏液(干预组)或用脂质乳剂补充心脏停搏液(安慰剂组)。随机化按手术类型分层,并按糖尿病状态进行最小化处理。正在评估心脏损伤和代谢的生物标志物,以研究是否存在任何心脏保护作用。主要结局是心肌损伤,通过测量心肌肌钙蛋白T来研究。该试验旨在检验每个手术亚组中关于干预措施优越性的假设。假设每个手术亚组人数相等,选择96名参与者的样本量是为了在5%(双侧)的显著性水平下有80%的把握检测到0.5的标准化差异。
在两年时间里共成功招募了96名患者。结果将于2014年末发表。
设计一种在心脏手术期间向心脏输送潜在保护剂量丙泊酚的可行方法具有挑战性。如果我们的方法证实了丙泊酚在心脏手术中减少损伤的潜力,我们计划设计一项更大规模的多中心试验来检测临床结局的差异。
国际标准随机对照试验编号(ISRCTN):84968882;http://www.controlled-trials.com/ISRCTN84968882/ProMPT(由WebCite存档于http://www.webcitation.org/6Qi8A51BS)