In this study, we want to find out if laughing gas (nitrous oxide) leads to a higher rate of cardiac complications after surgery in patients with a specific genetic profile (mutations in the MTHFR gene) and if this risk can be prevented by giving patients vitamin B12 and folate during surgery.
Background and significance: Recent studies have shown that nitrous oxide (N2O) anesthesia may be associated with an increased risk of adverse cardiovascular outcomes. It is well-known that N2O inhibits vitamin B12-dependent enzymes and as a result increases plasma homocysteine concentrations. Homocysteine has been identified as risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Therefore elevations in homocysteine after N2O may be a causative factor in N2O toxicity. In a previous investigation, we found that patients who carry a homozygous mutation in the MTHFR gene develop higher homocysteine levels after N2O anesthesia than non-carriers. These patients might be at higher risk for adverse cardiac outcomes from N2O. Thus, there may be a pharmacogenetic mechanism to account for the adverse cardiac outcomes from N2O. Moreover, prevention of N2O-increased homocysteine concentrations in these high risk patients by perioperative vitamin B12 and folate supplementation might decrease the incidence of adverse cardiac outcomes. Hypothesis: Patients carrying a homozygous MTHFR 677C\>T or 1298 A\>C variant allele will have a higher incidence rate of postoperative myocardial ischemia after N2O anesthesia \[detected by serial TnI measurements\] due to elevated homocysteine levels than normal "wild-type" non-carriers, and that the incidence rate will be reduced if they receive perioperative vitamin B12/folate supplementation. Primary outcome: Myocardial ischemia in the first 72 hours after surgery (measured by serial troponin and ECGs). Secondary outcome: Composite endpoint of 30-day mortality and major cardiac morbidity (non-fatal MI) Design: Randomized controlled trial. 500 patients will receive N2O during surgery and will be randomized to receive B-vitamins or placebo. 125 patients will receive no N2O and no B-vitamins (control arm). Mendelian randomization of MTHFR genotype. Intervention: IV vitamin B12 (1 mg) and folate (5 mg) pre- and postoperatively Study setting: Barnes-Jewish-Hospital, St. Louis, MO Patients: Patients scheduled for major surgery with or at risk for coronary artery disease
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
687
1 mg vitamin B12 IV 5 mg folic acid IV in 100 ml NS infusion
Barnes-Jewish Hospital
St Louis, Missouri, United States
Myocardial Ischemia
Measured by serial troponin and ECG
Time frame: first 3 postoperative days
Non-fatal MI
Myocardial Infarction per Third Definition of MI
Time frame: 30 day postoperative
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