Abstract

BackgroundHypotension during anaesthesia for hip fracture surgery is common. Recent data suggest that there is an association between the lowest intra-operative blood pressure and mortality, even when adjusted for co-morbidities. This is consistent with data derived from the wider surgical population, where magnitude and duration of hypotension are associated with mortality and peri-operative complications. However, there are no trial to data to support more aggressive blood pressure control.Methods/designWe are conducting a three-centre, randomised, double-blinded pilot study in three hospitals in the United Kingdom. The sample size will be 75 patients (25 from each centre). Randomisation will be done using computer-generated concealed tables. Both participants and investigators will be blinded to group allocation. Participants will be aged >70 years, cognitively intact (Abbreviated Mental Test Score 7 or greater), able to give informed consent and admitted directly through the emergency department with a fractured neck of the femur requiring operative repair. Patients randomised to tight blood pressure control or avoidance of intra-operative hypotension will receive active treatment as required to maintain both of the following: systolic arterial blood pressure >80% of baseline pre-operative value and mean arterial pressure >75 mmHg throughout. All participants will receive standard hospital care, including spinal or general anaesthesia, at the discretion of the clinical team. The primary outcome is a composite of the presence or absence of defined cardiovascular, renal and delirium morbidity within 7 days of surgery (myocardial injury, stroke, acute kidney injury, delirium). Secondary endpoints will include the defined individual morbidities, mortality, early mobility and discharge to usual residence.DiscussionThis is a small-scale pilot study investigating the feasibility of a trial of tight intra-operative blood pressure control in a frail elderly patient group with known high morbidity and mortality. Positive findings will provide the basis for a larger-scale study.Trial registrationISRCTN Registry identifier: ISRCTN89812075. Registered on 30 August 2016.

Highlights

  • Hypotension during anaesthesia for hip fracture surgery is common

  • This is a small-scale pilot study investigating the feasibility of a trial of tight intra-operative blood pressure control in a frail elderly patient group with known high morbidity and mortality

  • Anaesthesia Sprint Audit of Practice (ASAP) data support this observation [2]: 30-day post-operative mortality was significantly higher among patients whose mean arterial pressure (MAP) fell below 55 mmHg intra-operatively than among those whose lowest MAP remained above this threshold (6.0% vs 4.6%, p = 0.002)

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Summary

Introduction

Recent data suggest that there is an association between the lowest intra-operative blood pressure and mortality, even when adjusted for co-morbidities. Observational data derived from 11,000 patients in the Anaesthesia Sprint Audit of Practice (ASAP) study [1, 2] have shown that regardless of anaesthetic technique or definition, hypotension during hip fracture surgery is very prevalent. Other recent large U.S retrospective observational studies of general surgical patients have found significant associations between intra-operative hypotension (MAP

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