The following info and data is provided "as is" to help patients around the globe.
We do not endorse or review these studies in any way.
Brief Title: A Prospective Study Evaluating the Use of Intraoperative Stroke Volume Variation Via the FloTrac Device to Guide Fluid and Vasopressor Management in Head and Neck Free Flaps
Official Title: Does the Intraoperative Use of the FloTrac Device to Guide Fluid and Vasopressor Management Affect Postoperative Morbidity in Patients Receiving a Head and Neck Microvascular Free Tissue Transfer
Study ID: NCT02186938
Brief Summary: This study aims to investigate whether the intraoperative use of the FloTrac device to guide fluid and vasopressor management during head and neck free flap surgery improves postoperative outcome. Primary postoperative outcome is length of hospital stay. Secondary postoperative outcomes include days in ICU, days on ventilator, presence of postoperative pulmonary edema, need for postoperative vasopressors or transfusions, 30 day flap complication rate, inpatient postoperative cardiorespiratory complications/events, and overall 30 day flap failure rate.
Detailed Description: Few animal models have shown that intravenous vasopressor administration (including use of pure alpha agonists such as phenylephrine) can decrease blood flow to free musculocutaneous flaps (1-3). This has led to a dogmatic belief that all vasopressors should be avoided intraoperatively during a microvascular free flap reconstruction regardless of patient hemodynamics, even though there is little published evidence that pressors negatively affect free flap outcome (4). As a result, these patients often receive generous amounts of fluids during their intraoperative course to combat periods of hypotension. However, patients receiving head and neck free tissue transfers tend to be older with serious comorbidities related to long term tobacco use such as significant cardiovascular and pulmonary disease. Thus, they often exhibit intraoperative hemodynamic lability with periods of hypotension that may not necessarily be related to hypovolemia. Consistently treating periods of hypotension with more intravenous fluids can lead to serious postoperative complications such as graft failure (4), pulmonary edema, and congestive heart failure. In fact, we have just completed a retrospective review of 248 patients over a 34 month period that received a head and neck free tissue transfer; we discovered that a 1ml/kg/hr increase in intraoperative fluid administration significantly increased 30 day flap complication rate while intraoperative administration of vasopressors did not affect 30 day flap complication or 30 day failure rate. The FloTrac device is an approved and validated medical device that analyzes the arterial pressure waveform to calculate a stroke volume variation. This stroke volume variation can be used to better guide intraoperative patient therapy with regard to need for fluid vs. pressor management during periods of intraoperative hypotension (5). The use of the FloTrac device for goal directed therapy has been investigated in major abdominal surgery and found to decrease length of hospital stay and complication rate in this surgical population (5-6). Thus, it is possible that the intraoperative use of the FloTrac device can better guide anesthesia providers to provide the necessary therapy for intraoperative hypotension in patients undergoing head and neck freet tissue transfer, thus improving postoperative outcome.
Minimum Age: 18 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: No
Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, United States
Name: Scott T Reeves, MD
Affiliation: Medical University of South Carolina
Role: STUDY_CHAIR