The overall purpose of this study is to see if a Bispectral Index (BIS) monitor, a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved brain monitoring device, will help to reduce the risk of patients remembering being awake during surgery. The BIS monitor may be able to measure how asleep a patient is during surgery. Using the BIS monitor to guide anesthesia will be compared with using the concentration of anesthetic gas to guide anesthesia.
The incidence of anesthesia awareness (AA) is 0.1-0.2% and may result in post traumatic stress disorders. For some patients, owing to illness, medications, substance misuse or surgery, the risk approaches 1%. The B-AWARE Study by Myles et al. suggested that the bispectral index (BIS) monitor, which reportedly reflects anesthetic depth, may decrease the incidence of AA in higher risk patients by 82%. The American Society of Anesthesiologists has published a practice advisory on AA, which does not recommend the routine use of cerebral function monitors. We propose to test the hypothesis that an anesthetic protocol based on BIS decreases the incidence of AA among higher risk patients compared with an anesthetic protocol based on the end-tidal anesthetic gas (ETAG) concentration. We have completed a randomized, single-blinded prospective feasibility study (The B-Unaware Trial) which enrolled 2000 patients at higher risk for AA. Four patients (0.21%; 95% CI=0.06% to 0.57%) had definite AA, of whom two were in the BIS-guided group and two in the ETAG-guided group. Nine patients (0.46%; 95% CI=0.22% to 0.91%) had definite or possible AA, of whom six were in the BIS-guided group and three in the ETAG-guided group. The BAG RECALL study will be a multi-center, prospective, single-blinded, randomized study enrolling 6000 patients at higher risk for AA. The BAG RECALL study is adequately powered and rigorously designed to answer with a reasonable degree of scientific probability whether BIS guidance results in clinically relevant reduction in anesthesia awareness among higher risk patients undergoing general anesthesia. At the University of Michigan, a parallel study will be conducted - Michigan Awareness Control Study, MACS (NCT00689091) - enrolling 30,000 patients to assess whether the BIS monitor decreases the likelihood of anesthesia awareness among all patients undergoing general anesthesia, regardless of their risk profile. The investigators of this study and the BAG-RECALL study have collaborated in designing these studies and are pre-specifying that common outcome measures will be examined collaboratively including data from both studies.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Aim to titrate anesthesia to maintain BIS between 40 and 60.
Aim to maintain anesthetic gas between 0.7 and 1.3 MAC equivalents
University of Chicago
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Washington University
St Louis, Missouri, United States
University of Manitoba
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
The incidence of explicit recall of events during the surgical and anesthetic periods.
Time frame: Three years
Meta-analysis for anesthesia awareness incorporating higher risk patients from the completed B-Unaware Trial (NCT00281489), the BAG-RECALL Trial, and the Michigan Awareness Control Study (MACS)(NCT00689091).
Time frame: Three years
Incidence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Time frame: Five years
Association between type of awareness event and PTSD, and whether the PTSD is associated with late reporting (30 days) of awareness.
Time frame: 5 years
Types of dreams and their relationship to BIS and ETAG.
Time frame: Three years
The relationship between deep hypnotic time, anesthetic dose (MAC), mean arterial pressure, and end tidal carbon dioxide, and early (one-month) and late (one-year) mortality.
Time frame: Four years
Relationship between BIS, heart rate and blood pressure.
Time frame: Three years
Relationship between BIS and anesthesia dose and concentration.
Time frame: Three years
Association between baseline BIS values, patient health and early (one-month) and late (one-year) mortality.
Time frame: Four years
Interaction between hemispheric dominance and BIS.
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Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
6,000
Time frame: Three years
Effect of red hair phenotypes on the relationship between ETAG and BIS.
Time frame: Three years
Refinement of risk factors for anesthesia awareness.
Time frame: Three years
Relationship between rising BIS in the PACU and first memory after surgery.
Time frame: Three years
Postoperative delirium.
Time frame: Three years
BIS and mixed venous saturation.
Time frame: Three years
Induction of anesthesia and hypotension.
Time frame: Three years
Incidence of postoperative nausea and vomiting.
Time frame: Three years
Incidence of and severity of postoperative pain.
Time frame: Three years
Effect of BIS and ETAG protocols on time to open eyes, time to extubation, and time spent in the postoperative recovery unit.
Time frame: Three years
Effect of a defasciculating dose of a non-depolarizing muscle relaxant on BIS.
Time frame: Three years
The effect of patient temperature on BIS.
Time frame: Three years
Incidence of recall of traveling to the OR among patients who receive midazolam in the holding area and whose initial BIS reading in the OR is > 60.
Time frame: Three years
Relationship between BIS, ETAG and EEG parameters.
Time frame: Three years
Annual assessment of practitioners' abilities to interpret BIS tracings and to identify artefacts.
Time frame: Three years
Differences in anesthesia practice among four institutions in the USA and Canada as judged by anesthetic doses and BIS readings.
Time frame: Three years
Effect of BIS and ETAG protocols on anesthetic dose administration and on BIS readings.
Time frame: Three years