Norepinephrine Boluses in Liver Transplantation

December 20, 2022 updated by: Mansoura University

Norepinephrine Boluses for Prevention of Postreperfusion Syndrome in Living Donor Liver Transplantation

We study the efficacy of Norepinephrine boluses on prevention of postreperfusion syndrome during living donor liver transplantation.

NE and Post-reperfusion:

On portal vein declamping, we will start rapid 500 ml 4% albumin infusion or packed RBCs (according to the anhepatic hemoglobin level 5 min before declamping) through 14 Gauge peripheral venous cannula in all patients.

NE boluses technique; We will inject NE boluses in the C.V.P port of the pulmonary artery catheter with 5 ml saline flushing after each. After reperfusion, we will start bolus noradrenaline 20 µg if mean arterial blood pressure (mABP) decreases by 10 % or more of the basal reading (immediately before portal vein declamping after ensuring withholding of the surgical manipulation). Additional NE boluses will be given as follow;

  • If mABP rises to 65 mmHg (lowest target level), we will hold NE boluses.
  • If mABP remains constant or begins to rise but did not reach 65 mmHg, we will give 20 µg after 10 seconds from the previous bolus
  • If mABP continues to drop, we will add 10 µg to the previous dose after 10 seconds and can be repeated.
  • If mABP remains below 65 mmHg more than 1 minute, we will give the scheduled bolus NE with adding 10 µg adrenaline boluses.

Study Overview

Detailed Description

Anesthesia technique:

On admission to the pre-anesthetic room, patients will receive intravenous pantoprazole sodium 40 mg, midazolam 0.02 mg/kg and the prophylactic antibiotics.

In the operating room, we apply standard monitors in the form of pulse oximetry, non-invasive blood pressure, and electrocardiography. Induction of anesthesia will be fentanyl 2 µg/kg, propofol 1-2 mg/kg, and rocuronium bromide 0.8 -1 mg/kg.

After tracheal intubation, we will insert an arterial catheter in the radial artery of the non-dominant hand after performing modified Allen's test. Then, we will insert five port pulmonary artery catheter for continuous cardiac output monitoring (the equipment).

Anesthesia will be maintained by sevoflurane in 40% oxygen with infusion of fentanyl 0.5-1 µg/kg/h and rocuronium bromide 200-400 µg /kg/h. We adopt goal directed fluid replacement protocol keeping the target mABP of 65 mmHg using norepinephrine in fluid non-responders with low SVR (German medical association 2009). Crystalloids will be Ringer's Acetate and the colloid will be albumin 4% in Ringer Acetate solution.

We will keep the intraoperative and the two-day postoperative glucose between 110 and 180 mg/dl by intravenous insulin infusion or glucose 10% or 25% boluses as appropriate. We monitor UO hourly in the intraoperative and ICU periods and only administer frusemide to prevent volume overload.

Surgical technique:

The donor surgical team will excise the right liver lobe (without inclusion of the middle hepatic vein). They will flush the graft with 3-4 liters of cold histidine-tryptophan-ketoglutarate (HTK) (Custodial, Bensheim, Germany) via antegrade flushing of the portal vein to get completely clear fluid without flushing via the hepatic artery. Both recipient and donor operations will be synchronized to minimize graft preservation time.

The right hepatic vein will be unclamped then the portal vein and the graft preservative contents will be washed into the systemic circulation by the portal blood.

NE and Post-reperfusion:

On portal vein declamping, we will start rapid 500 ml 4% albumin infusion or packed RBCs (according to the anhepatic hemoglobin level 5 min before declamping) through 14 Gauge peripheral venous cannula in all patients.

NE boluses technique; We will inject NE boluses in the C.V.P port of the pulmonary artery catheter with 5 ml saline flushing after each. After reperfusion, we will start bolus noradrenaline 20 µg if mean arterial blood pressure (mABP) decreases by 10 % or more of the basal reading (immediately before portal vein declamping after ensuring withholding of the surgical manipulation). Additional NE boluses will be given as follow;

  • If mABP rises to 65 mmHg (lowest target level), we will hold NE boluses.
  • If mABP remains constant or begins to rise but did not reach 65 mmHg, we will give 20 µg after 10 seconds from the previous bolus
  • If mABP continues to drop, we will add 10 µg to the previous dose after 10 seconds and can be repeated.
  • If mABP remains below 65 mmHg more than 1 minute, we will give the scheduled bolus NE with adding 20 µg adrenaline boluses.

Immunosuppression:

All patients will receive intravenous 0.5 gm methylprednisolone at the start of the warm ischemia. After hepatic artery anastomosis and declamping, we will administer 500 mg mycophenolate mofetil through the nasogastric tube and i.v. 20 mg basiliximab.

In the ICU, patients will receive oral tacrolimus starting the day after the operation (adjusting the dose targeting serum level of 5-10 ng/ml) and mycophenolate mofetil 500 mg 4 days after.

In the ICU:

We adopt early ICU tracheal extubation once the patient is hemodynamically stable and pH > 7.3 with adequate consciousness and muscle power (guided by neuromuscular monitoring).

We will keep the pulmonary artery catheter in place for hemodynamic monitoring in case of instability and will exchange it by central venous catheter after 48 hours postoperatively.

Data collection and Monitoring:

1- Preoperative data:

  1. Age, sex, weight, height, BSA, MELD score and Child-Pugh classification
  2. Medical co-morbidities: hypertension, cardiac diseases, Diabetes Mellitus
  3. Cause of the end stage liver disease (ESLD), and the donor age and gender
  4. Liver tests: serum albumin, bilirubin, INR, AST, ALT
  5. S.Cr
  6. C-reactive protein We will collect the preoperative data 24 hours before the operation.

2- Intra-operative and Post-operative data: The primary outcome will be the incidence of PRS. We will record the lowest mABP, the duration of hypotension (below 20% from the basal value or below 65 mmHg). We will record significant arrhythmias, ischemia (ST depression more than 1mV in lead II) during reperfusion and NE boluses. We will report the need and duration of pre-reperfusion and post-reperfusion NE infusions.

We will record the intraoperative CI, SVI, mABP, mPAP, PAOP, SVR, PVR, and serum Na, K, ionized Ca and Cl at six times;

  • immediately before skin incision,
  • at the beginning of the anhepatic (portal vein clamping),
  • 5 minutes before portal reperfusion,
  • 5 min after portal unclamping,
  • 5 min after hepatic arterial declamping and
  • at the time of skin closure. The incidence of the AKI defined as 50% increase in the S.Cr or 0.3 mg/dl increase from the baseline S.Cr in the early 48 post¬operative hours. In the postoperative period, S.Cr will be measured at arrival to ICU, 1st, 2nd, 7th, 28th and at three-month postoperative with measuring of the 24 hour-urine output in the first 2 days.

We will stage AKI as follow: stage 1 when S.Cr = 1.5-1.9 times baseline or > 0.3 mg/dl increase from the baseline, stage 2 when S.Cr = 2-2.9 times baseline and stage 3 when S.Cr = 3 times baseline or increase to > 4 mg/dl or initiation of renal replacement therapy.

We will record warm ischemia, cold ischemia, the total ischemia and the operative times. We will mention the blood transfusions (before and after reperfusion), UO in the anhepatic phase and the total intraoperative amounts.

Laboratory assessment of the graft function will include pH, serum lactate, INR, AST, ALT, GGT, albumin and bilirubin at the 1st, 2nd and 7th days postoperatively. We will report early postoperative surgical complications (7 days) especially vascular insufficiency of the graft detected by the ultrasound Doppler evaluation.

In case of persistent graft dysfunction, graft rejection and ischemia- reperfusion injury will be diagnosed and graded by histopathological examination of liver biopsy performed by consultant liver pathologist.

Study Type

Interventional

Enrollment (Actual)

40

Phase

  • Phase 2
  • Phase 1

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Locations

    • Dakahlia
      • Mansoura, Dakahlia, Egypt, 35516
        • Mansoura University, Gastrointestinal Surgery Center, Liver Transplantation

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

14 years to 61 years (Adult, Older Adult)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Genders Eligible for Study

All

Description

Inclusion Criteria:

  • All patients subjected to living donor liver transplantation with right lobe liver graft.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Acute fulminant hepatitis
  2. Chronic hypertension
  3. Moderate to severe valvular heart disease
  4. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) and Hepatorenal syndrome (HRS)
  5. Preoperative S.Cr elevation > 1.4 mg/kg or dialysis recently before surgery
  6. Long standing diabetes mellitus (> 10 years on insulin)
  7. Moderate and sever Porto-pulmonary hypertension
  8. Moderate and sever Hepato-pulmonary syndrome (HPS)
  9. Contraindications to pulmonary artery catheter insertion
  10. Budd Chiari syndrome
  11. Re-transplantation
  12. Massive blood transfusion (more than 5 units of blood before portal clamping)
  13. Graft/weight ratio > 1.4 and < 0.8

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

  • Primary Purpose: Prevention
  • Allocation: N/A
  • Interventional Model: Single Group Assignment
  • Masking: None (Open Label)

Arms and Interventions

Participant Group / Arm
Intervention / Treatment
Experimental: Norepinephrine boluses
Single arm study

On portal vein declamping, We will inject NE boluses in the C.V.P port of the pulmonary artery catheter with 5 ml saline flushing after each. After reperfusion, we will start bolus noradrenaline 20 µg if mean arterial blood pressure (mABP) decreases by 10 % or more of the basal reading (immediately before portal vein declamping after ensuring withholding of the surgical manipulation). Additional NE boluses will be given as follow;

  • If mABP rises to 65 mmHg (lowest target level), we will hold NE boluses.
  • If mABP remains constant or begins to rise but did not reach 65 mmHg, we will give 20 µg after 10 seconds from the previous bolus
  • If mABP continues to drop, we will add 10 µg to the previous dose after 10 seconds and can be repeated.
  • If mABP remains below 65 mmHg more than 1 minute, we will give the scheduled bolus NE with adding 10 µg adrenaline boluses.
Other Names:
  • Noradrenaline boluses

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Incidence of postreperfusion syndrome
Time Frame: 5 minutes after reperfusion
PRS defined as 30% drop in the mABP when compared to the mABP just before portal declamping sustained for 1 min within the first 5 min after portal unclamping
5 minutes after reperfusion

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Arrhythmia
Time Frame: During and 5 minutes after norepinephrine boluses
if significant and persistent (or needed treatment or intervention)
During and 5 minutes after norepinephrine boluses
Ischemia
Time Frame: During and 5 minutes after norepinephrine boluses
ST depression more than 1mV in lead II
During and 5 minutes after norepinephrine boluses
Liver graft function
Time Frame: After 2 days postoperative
By pH, serum lactate mmol/l, INR, AST u/ml, ALT u/ml, albumin gm/dl and bilirubin ml/dl as a composite outcome
After 2 days postoperative
Acute kidney injury
Time Frame: within the first 2 days postoperative
50% increase in the S.Cr or 0.3 mg/dl increase from the baseline S.Cr in the early 48 post¬operative hours
within the first 2 days postoperative
3-month survival
Time Frame: 90 days after surgery
survival within 3 months after liver transplantation
90 days after surgery
one-year survival
Time Frame: one year after transplantation
survival for one year post-transplantation as a dichotomous outcome
one year after transplantation

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Investigators

  • Study Director: Amr M Yassen, Professor, Mansoura University

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start (Actual)

December 17, 2018

Primary Completion (Actual)

April 18, 2020

Study Completion (Actual)

August 28, 2020

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

December 3, 2018

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

December 9, 2018

First Posted (Actual)

December 12, 2018

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (Actual)

December 21, 2022

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

December 20, 2022

Last Verified

December 1, 2022

More Information

Terms related to this study

Plan for Individual participant data (IPD)

Plan to Share Individual Participant Data (IPD)?

Yes

IPD Plan Description

We will make anonymized individual data available to researchers at appropriate requests. We may make them available as a supplement along with the published manuscript if the journal supports this option.

Drug and device information, study documents

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product

No

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product

No

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

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