Main Research Questions: 1. Is a large trial of patients undergoing heart surgery comparing a simple procedure of temporarily stopping blood flow to the leg with a blood pressure cuff (called remote ischemic preconditioning) to a sham procedure possible? 2. Does the remote ischemic preconditioning procedure before heart surgery help protect the heart and kidneys? What is Being Studied: A simple procedure known as remote ischemic preconditioning. The procedure is performed by inflating a pressurized cuff the thigh to temporarily stop blood flow to the arm or leg. This procedure causes the body to have a stress response that, at the cellular level, may protect major organs like the heart and kidney from the damage caused to them by the much larger stress of cardiac surgery. Reducing this damage may improve patient's recovery after surgery and help them live longer. Why is this study important?: This research is important because up to 1 in every 20 patients that undergo heart surgery die before even leaving hospital. Preventing heart and kidney damage at the time of surgery with remote ischemic preconditioning may reduce patient deaths.
Annually, 2 million patients worldwide undergo heart surgery. Although this procedure can prolong life, 1 in 20 patients will not survive their hospital stay. Acute heart and kidney injuries are important causes of death after heart surgery. Remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC) is a promising and simple therapy that may simultaneously reduce heart and kidney damage. RIPC involves the inflation of a tourniquet or blood pressure cuff on a limb to briefly stop blood flow to that limb. This period of no blood flow activates the body's own protective systems and releases protective chemicals into the blood that also protect the heart and kidneys. RIPC is a particularly attractive potential treatment because it may protect several organs at once, it has no known adverse effects and costs almost nothing. RIPC could therefore very easily be used globally to improve outcomes for all patients undergoing heart surgery. Although RIPC appears very promising in several small studies using different RIPC regimens there are no studies large enough to definitively evaluate whether RIPC improves patient important outcomes (e.g. survival, kidney failure, major heart attack, or stroke). Before performing a large trial to determine whether RIPC is effective, we must demonstrate that such a trial is feasible. We will determine the recruitment rate and adequacy of follow-up in an international group of centres to ensure that an adequately powered trial of RIPC compared to a sham procedure is possible. Further, we will ensure that our RIPC regimen is consistent with other trials in terms of effects on cardiac and kidney injury. This pilot trial will enroll 250 patients and randomize half to RIPC and half to a sham procedure. We call this trial the Remote IscheMia Preconditioning in cArdiaC surgery Trial (Remote IMPACT).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
250
Occlusion of leg blood flow using a pneumatic tourniquet on the thigh. Tourniquets are inflated to 300 mmHg for 5 minutes followed by deflation for 5 minutes then repeated for a total of 3 inflations.
Sham procedure. A pneumatic tourniquet is placed on an upper arm and/or thigh but not inflated.
Maine Medical Centre
Portland, Maine, United States
Wake Forest
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States
University of Calgary
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Maritime Heart Centre
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
McMaster University
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Lawson Health Research Institute
London, Ontario, Canada
Sunnybrook Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Peak CK-MB within 24 hours after surgery
Peak CK-MB within 24 hours after surgery
Time frame: 24 hours
Change in serum creatinine
Time frame: within 4 days after surgery
All-cause mortality
Time frame: 6 months after surgery
Need for Dialysis
Time frame: 6 months after surgery
Length of hospital stay
Time frame: Discharge from hospital after surgery
Length of stay in the intensive care unit
Time frame: Discharge from hospital after surgery
Incidence of pneumonia
Time frame: 30 days after surgery
Incidence of stroke
Time frame: 6 months after surgery
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