Effect of 4% Albumin Solution vs Ringer Acetate on Major Adverse Events in Patients Undergoing Cardiac Surgery With Cardiopulmonary Bypass: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Eero Pesonen, Hanna Vlasov, Raili Suojaranta, Seppo Hiippala, Alexey Schramko, Erika Wilkman, Tiina Eränen, Kaapo Arvonen, Maxim Mazanikov, Ulla-Stina Salminen, Mihkel Meinberg, Tommi Vähäsilta, Liisa Petäjä, Peter Raivio, Tatu Juvonen, Ville Pettilä, Eero Pesonen, Hanna Vlasov, Raili Suojaranta, Seppo Hiippala, Alexey Schramko, Erika Wilkman, Tiina Eränen, Kaapo Arvonen, Maxim Mazanikov, Ulla-Stina Salminen, Mihkel Meinberg, Tommi Vähäsilta, Liisa Petäjä, Peter Raivio, Tatu Juvonen, Ville Pettilä

Abstract

Importance: In cardiac surgery, albumin solution may maintain hemodynamics better than crystalloids and reduce the decrease in platelet count and excessive fluid balance, but randomized trials are needed to compare the effectiveness of these approaches in reducing surgical complications.

Objective: To assess whether 4% albumin solution compared with Ringer acetate as cardiopulmonary bypass prime and perioperative intravenous volume replacement solution reduces the incidence of major perioperative and postoperative complications in patients undergoing cardiac surgery.

Design, setting, and participants: A randomized, double-blind, single-center clinical trial in a tertiary university hospital during 2017-2020 with 90-day follow-up postoperatively involving patients undergoing on-pump coronary artery bypass grafting; aortic, mitral, or tricuspid valve surgery; ascending aorta surgery without hypothermic circulatory arrest; and/or the maze procedure were randomly assigned to 2 study groups (last follow-up was April 13, 2020).

Interventions: The patients received in a 1:1 ratio either 4% albumin solution (n = 693) or Ringer acetate solution (n = 693) as cardiopulmonary bypass priming and intravenous volume replacement intraoperatively and up to 24 hours postoperatively.

Main outcomes and measures: The primary outcome was the number of patients with at least 1 major adverse event: death, myocardial injury, acute heart failure, resternotomy, stroke, arrhythmia, bleeding, infection, or acute kidney injury.

Results: Among 1407 patients randomized, 1386 (99%; mean age, 65.4 [SD, 9.9] years; 1091 men [79%]; 295 women [21%]) completed the trial. Patients received a median of 2150 mL (IQR, 1598-2700 mL) of study fluid in the albumin group and 3298 mL (IQR, 2669-3500 mL) in the Ringer group. The number of patients with at least 1 major adverse event was 257 of 693 patients (37.1%) in the albumin group and 234 of 693 patients (33.8%) in the Ringer group (relative risk albumin/Ringer, 1.10; 95% CI, 0.95-1.27; P = .20), an absolute difference of 3.3 percentage points (95% CI, -1.7 to 8.4). The most common serious adverse events were pulmonary embolus (11 [1.6%] in the albumin group vs 8 [1.2%] in the Ringer group), postpericardiotomy syndrome (9 [1.3%] in both groups), and pleural effusion with intensive care unit or hospital readmission (7 [1.0%] in the albumin group vs 9 [1.3%] in the Ringer group).

Conclusions and relevance: Among patients undergoing cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass, treatment with 4% albumin solution for priming and perioperative intravenous volume replacement solution compared with Ringer acetate did not significantly reduce the risk of major adverse events over the following 90 days. These findings do not support the use of 4% albumin solution in this setting.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02560519.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest Disclosures: None reported.

Figures

Figure 1.. Flow Diagram of Patient Recruitment…
Figure 1.. Flow Diagram of Patient Recruitment and Follow-up
aCoronary artery bypass graft surgery, aortic valve replacement or repair surgery, mitral valve replacement or repair surgery, tricuspid valve replacement or repair surgery, the maze procedure or its modifications, surgery of the aortic root or ascending aorta not requiring hypothermic circulatory arrest.
Figure 2.. Primary Composite Outcome of Major…
Figure 2.. Primary Composite Outcome of Major Adverse Events After Cardiac Surgery
Major adverse events included all of the subsequent categories.

Source: PubMed

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