Effect of a Perioperative Hypotension-Avoidance Strategy Versus a Hypertension-Avoidance Strategy on the Risk of Acute Kidney Injury: A Clinical Research Protocol for a Substudy of the POISE-3 Randomized Clinical Trial

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  • Amit X. Garg
  • Meaghan Cuerden
  • Hector Aguado
  • Mohammed Amir
  • Emilie P Belley-Cote
  • Keyur Bhatt
  • Bruce M. Biccard
  • Flavia K. Borges
  • Matthew Chan
  • David Conen
  • Emmanuelle Duceppe
  • Sergey Efremov
  • John Eikelboom
  • Edith Fleischmann
  • Landoni Giovanni
  • Peter Gross
  • Raja Jayaram
  • Mikhail Kirov
  • Ydo Kleinlugtenbelt
  • Andrea Kurz
  • Andre Lamy
  • Kate Leslie
  • Valery Likhvantsev
  • Vladimir Lomivorotov
  • Maura Marcucci
  • Maria José Martínez-Zapata
  • Michael McGillion
  • William McIntyre
  • Sandra Ofori
  • Thomas Painter
  • Pilar Paniagua
  • Chirag Parikh
  • Joel Parlow
  • Ameen Patel
  • Carisi Polanczyk
  • Toby Richards
  • Pavel Roshanov
  • Denis Schmartz
  • Daniel Sessler
  • Tim Short
  • Jessica M. Sontrop
  • Jessica Spence
  • Sadeesh Srinathan
  • David Stillo
  • Wojciech Szczeklik
  • Vikas Tandon
  • David Torres
  • Thomas Van Helder
  • Jessica Vincent
  • C. Y. Wang
  • Michael Wang
  • Richard Whitlock
  • Maria Wittmann
  • Denis Xavier
  • P. J. Devereaux

Background: Most patients who take antihypertensive medications continue taking them on the morning of surgery and during the perioperative period. However, growing evidence suggests this practice may contribute to perioperative hypotension and a higher risk of complications. This protocol describes an acute kidney injury substudy of the Perioperative Ischemic Evaluation-3 (POISE-3) trial, which is testing the effect of a perioperative hypotension-avoidance strategy versus a hypertension-avoidance strategy in patients undergoing noncardiac surgery. Objective: To conduct a substudy of POISE-3 to determine whether a perioperative hypotension-avoidance strategy reduces the risk of acute kidney injury compared with a hypertension-avoidance strategy. Design: Randomized clinical trial with 1:1 randomization to the intervention (a perioperative hypotension-avoidance strategy) or control (a hypertension-avoidance strategy). Intervention: If the presurgery systolic blood pressure (SBP) is <130 mmHg, all antihypertensive medications are withheld on the morning of surgery. If the SBP is ≥130 mmHg, some medications (but not angiotensin receptor blockers [ACEIs], angiotensin receptor blockers [ARBs], or renin inhibitors) may be continued in a stepwise manner. During surgery, the patients’ mean arterial pressure (MAP) is maintained at ≥80 mmHg. During the first 48 hours after surgery, some antihypertensive medications (but not ACEIs, ARBs, or renin inhibitors) may be restarted in a stepwise manner if the SBP is ≥130 mmHg. Control: Patients receive their usual antihypertensive medications before and after surgery. The patients’ MAP is maintained at ≥60 mmHg from anesthetic induction until the end of surgery. Setting: Recruitment from 108 centers in 22 countries from 2018 to 2021. Patients: Patients (~6800) aged ≥45 years having noncardiac surgery who have or are at risk of atherosclerotic disease and who routinely take antihypertensive medications. Measurements: The primary outcome of the substudy is postoperative acute kidney injury, defined as an increase in serum creatinine concentration of either ≥26.5 μmol/L (≥0.3 mg/dL) within 48 hours of randomization or ≥50% within 7 days of randomization. Methods: The primary analysis (intention-to-treat) will examine the relative risk and 95% confidence interval of acute kidney injury in the intervention versus control group. We will repeat the primary analysis using alternative definitions of acute kidney injury and examine effect modification by preexisting chronic kidney disease, defined as a prerandomization estimated glomerular filtration rate <60 mL/min/1.73 m2. Results: Substudy results will be analyzed in 2022. Limitations: It is not possible to mask patients or providers to the intervention; however, objective measures will be used to assess acute kidney injury. Conclusions: This substudy will provide generalizable estimates of the effect of a perioperative hypotension-avoidance strategy on the risk of acute kidney injury.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftCanadian Journal of Kidney Health and Disease
Vol/bind9
Sider (fra-til)1-9
Antal sider9
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2022

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: The Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) provided an operating grant for the main POISE-3 trial. The Kidney Foundation of Canada provided an operating grant for the POISE-3 kidney substudy and additional financial support was provided by the Department of Medicine at Western University. In addition, the authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: F.K.B. holds a McMaster University Department of Medicine Career Research Award; M.C. holds grants from the Australian NHMRC (APP1162362) and the Research Grants Council of Hong Kong, General Research Fund (14104419); P.J.D. was supported by a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Perioperative Medicine; A.X.G. was supported by the Dr Adam Linton Chair in Kidney Health Analytics and a Clinician Investigator Salary Award from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research; M.J.M.Z. is funded by a Miguel Servet II research contract from the ISCIII (CP1120/00023), Spain; T.R. is supported by the Medical and Health Research Infrastructure Fund; and P.R. was supported by the Western University Resident Research Fellowship Program. No funding entity had a role in data collection, statistical analysis, manuscript writing, or the decision to publish.

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2022.

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