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The Effects of Corticosteroids, Glucose Control, and Depth-of-Anesthesia on Perioperative Inflammation and Morbidity From Major Non-cardiac Surgery (Dexamethasone, Light Anesthesia and Tight Glucose Control (DeLiT Trial))

Primary Purpose

Inflammation, Perioperative Morbidity

Status
Terminated
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
United States
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Dexamethasone Sodium Sulfate
Insulin
anesthesia management
Dexamethasone - placebo
Insulin - Placebo
Anesthesia management -Placebo
Sponsored by
d sessler
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional treatment trial for Inflammation focused on measuring steroid administration, tight glucose control, light anesthesiReducing inflammatory response to surgical stress, a

Eligibility Criteria

40 Years - 90 Years (Adult, Older Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Age ≥40 years old.
  2. Major non-cardiac surgical procedures scheduled to take ≥ two hours done under general anesthesia.
  3. Written informed consent

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Recent intravenous or oral steroid therapy (within 30 days); inhaled steroids are permitted
  2. Any contraindications to the proposed interventions
  3. ASA Physical Status > 4
  4. Non English speaking patients
  5. Procedures done under regional anesthesia

Sites / Locations

  • Cleveland Clinic

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm 3

Arm 4

Arm 5

Arm 6

Arm 7

Arm 8

Arm Type

Active Comparator

Active Comparator

Active Comparator

Active Comparator

Active Comparator

Active Comparator

Active Comparator

Placebo Comparator

Arm Label

Intensive Glucose Control, Dexamethasone, light anesthesia

Intensive Glucose Control, Dexamethasone, Deep anesthesia

Intensive Glucose Control, placebo, Light anesthesia

Conventional Glucose Control, Dexamethasone, Light anesthesia

Intensive Glucose Control, Placebo, Deep anesthesia

Conventional Glucose Control, Dexamethasone, Deep anesthesia

Conventional Glucose Control, Placebo, Light anesthesia

Conventional Glucose Control, Placebo, Deep anesthesia

Arm Description

Intensive Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 80-110 mg/dl Dexamethasone Dexamethasone administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Light anesthesia target BIS of 55

Intensive Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 80-110 mg/dl Dexamethasone Dexamethasone administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Deep anesthesia target BIS of 35

Intensive Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 80-110 mg/dl Placebo Placebo administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Light anesthesia target BIS of 55

Conventional Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 180-200 mg/dl Dexamethasone Dexamethasone administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Light anesthesia target BIS of 55

Intensive Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 80-110 mg/dl Placebo Placebo administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Deep anesthesia target BIS of 35

Conventional Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 180-200 mg/dl Dexamethasone Dexamethasone administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Deep anesthesia target BIS of 35

Conventional Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 180-200 mg/dl Placebo Placebo administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Light anesthesia target BIS of 55

Conventional Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 180-200 mg/dl Placebo Placebo administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Deep anesthesia target BIS of 35

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Major Perioperative Morbidity
Our primary outcome was a collapsed composite endpoint (any versus none) defined as the occurrence of at least one of sixteen major complications before hospital discharge, including sepsis, severe surgical site infection, myocardial infarction, heart failure, stroke, unstable ventricular arrhythmias, pulmonary embolism, pneumonia, respiratory failure, dialysis dependent renal failure, large pleural or peritoneal effusions, major bleeding, major wound and surgical site healing complications, vascular graft thrombosis, and 30-day mortality.

Secondary Outcome Measures

1 Year Mortality
All-cause mortality

Full Information

First Posted
October 14, 2009
Last Updated
March 15, 2017
Sponsor
d sessler
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT00995501
Brief Title
The Effects of Corticosteroids, Glucose Control, and Depth-of-Anesthesia on Perioperative Inflammation and Morbidity From Major Non-cardiac Surgery (Dexamethasone, Light Anesthesia and Tight Glucose Control (DeLiT Trial))
Official Title
The Effects of Corticosteroids, Glucose Control, and Depth-of-Anesthesia on Perioperative Inflammation and Morbidity From Major Non-cardiac Surgery (Dexamethasone, Light Anesthesia and Tight Glucose Control (DeLiT Trial))
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
March 2017
Overall Recruitment Status
Terminated
Why Stopped
Per interim analysis, for futility.
Study Start Date
January 2007 (undefined)
Primary Completion Date
December 2015 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
December 2015 (Actual)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Sponsor-Investigator
Name of the Sponsor
d sessler

4. Oversight

Data Monitoring Committee
Yes

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
Evidence thus suggests that steroid administration, tight glucose control, and avoidance of deep anesthesia may decrease perioperative morbidity by reducing the inflammatory response to surgery. Using a three-way factorial approach, the investigators thus propose to test the primary hypotheses that major perioperative morbidity is reduced by: 1) low-dose dexamethasone; 2) intensive perioperative glucose control; and 3) lighter anesthesia. Secondary hypotheses include that each intervention reduces circulating concentrations of the inflammatory marker CRP, and that there is a correlation between C-reactive protein (CRP) and post-operative complications. Anesthetic sensitivity predicts major and minor complications, and delirium Other secondary hypotheses are that each intervention, reduces minor surgical complications, reduces postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV), reduces postoperative delirium, speeds hospital discharge, improves quality of life (SF-12v2 Health Survey, Christensen's VAS fatigue score), and reduces all-cause one-year mortality.
Detailed Description
The perioperative period is characterized by an intense inflammatory response marked by elevated concentrations of inflammatory markers like C-Reactive Protein (CRP). This response has been linked to increased perioperative morbidity and mortality. Available evidence suggests that blunting the inflammatory response to surgical trauma might improve perioperative outcomes. The putative benefits from blunting the surgical stress response are likely to be greatest in high-risk patients such as those having major non-cardiac surgery. We will study three interventions potentially modulating perioperative inflammation, corticosteroids, tight glucose control and light anesthesia and their effects on major morbidity and mortality resulting from major non-cardiac surgery. Steroids are the most powerful routinely available anti-inflammatory drugs. They decrease perioperative concentrations of inflammatory markers and improve outcomes after cardiac and abdominal surgery. Poorly controlled blood glucose worsens the inflammatory response to surgery. Hyperglycemia impairs wound healing, increases infection risk, increases overall hospital mortality, increases the risk of perioperative renal failure, and augments transfusion requirements. Treatment of hyperglycemia has been shown to improve outcomes and decrease mortality in cardiac patients. Also in critically ill patients, it decreased inflammatory markers, overall hospital mortality by 34%, blood stream infections by 46%, and acute renal failure by 41%. Cumulative deep hypnotic time is associated with increased one-year all-cause mortality, possibly through aggravation of the inflammatory response to surgery. In contrast, avoidance of deep anesthesia appears to reduce postoperative CRP levels, the risk of nausea and vomiting, as well as postoperative hemodynamic, respiratory and infectious complications. Evidence thus suggests that steroid administration, tight glucose control, and avoidance of deep anesthesia may decrease perioperative morbidity by reducing the inflammatory response to surgery. Using a three-way factorial approach, we thus propose to test the primary hypotheses that major perioperative morbidity is reduced by: 1) low-dose dexamethasone; 2) intensive perioperative glucose control; and, 3) lighter anesthesia. Secondary hypotheses include that each intervention reduces circulating concentrations of the inflammatory marker CRP, and that there is a correlation between CRP and post-operative complications. Anesthetic sensitivity predicts major and minor complications, and delirium Other secondary hypotheses are that each intervention, reduces minor surgical complications, reduces postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV), reduces postoperative delirium, speeds hospital discharge, improves quality of life (SF-12v2 Health Survey, Christensen's VAS fatigue score), and reduces all-cause one-year mortality.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Inflammation, Perioperative Morbidity
Keywords
steroid administration, tight glucose control, light anesthesiReducing inflammatory response to surgical stress, a

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Treatment
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Factorial Assignment
Masking
ParticipantInvestigator
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
381 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Intensive Glucose Control, Dexamethasone, light anesthesia
Arm Type
Active Comparator
Arm Description
Intensive Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 80-110 mg/dl Dexamethasone Dexamethasone administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Light anesthesia target BIS of 55
Arm Title
Intensive Glucose Control, Dexamethasone, Deep anesthesia
Arm Type
Active Comparator
Arm Description
Intensive Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 80-110 mg/dl Dexamethasone Dexamethasone administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Deep anesthesia target BIS of 35
Arm Title
Intensive Glucose Control, placebo, Light anesthesia
Arm Type
Active Comparator
Arm Description
Intensive Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 80-110 mg/dl Placebo Placebo administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Light anesthesia target BIS of 55
Arm Title
Conventional Glucose Control, Dexamethasone, Light anesthesia
Arm Type
Active Comparator
Arm Description
Conventional Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 180-200 mg/dl Dexamethasone Dexamethasone administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Light anesthesia target BIS of 55
Arm Title
Intensive Glucose Control, Placebo, Deep anesthesia
Arm Type
Active Comparator
Arm Description
Intensive Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 80-110 mg/dl Placebo Placebo administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Deep anesthesia target BIS of 35
Arm Title
Conventional Glucose Control, Dexamethasone, Deep anesthesia
Arm Type
Active Comparator
Arm Description
Conventional Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 180-200 mg/dl Dexamethasone Dexamethasone administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Deep anesthesia target BIS of 35
Arm Title
Conventional Glucose Control, Placebo, Light anesthesia
Arm Type
Active Comparator
Arm Description
Conventional Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 180-200 mg/dl Placebo Placebo administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Light anesthesia target BIS of 55
Arm Title
Conventional Glucose Control, Placebo, Deep anesthesia
Arm Type
Placebo Comparator
Arm Description
Conventional Glucose Control The target range for blood glucose will be 180-200 mg/dl Placebo Placebo administered at 8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning. Deep anesthesia target BIS of 35
Intervention Type
Drug
Intervention Name(s)
Dexamethasone Sodium Sulfate
Intervention Description
8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning
Intervention Type
Drug
Intervention Name(s)
Insulin
Intervention Description
Insulin to maintain blood glucose 80-110 mg/dl.
Intervention Type
Drug
Intervention Name(s)
anesthesia management
Intervention Description
Light anesthesia to maintain BIS about 55
Intervention Type
Other
Intervention Name(s)
Dexamethasone - placebo
Intervention Description
8 mg given 1-2 hours before surgery (incision time), 4 mg on the first postoperative morning, and 2 mg on the second postoperative morning
Intervention Type
Other
Intervention Name(s)
Insulin - Placebo
Intervention Description
Insulin to maintain blood glucose 180-200 mg/dl.
Intervention Type
Other
Intervention Name(s)
Anesthesia management -Placebo
Intervention Description
Deep anesthesia to maintain BIS about 35
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Major Perioperative Morbidity
Description
Our primary outcome was a collapsed composite endpoint (any versus none) defined as the occurrence of at least one of sixteen major complications before hospital discharge, including sepsis, severe surgical site infection, myocardial infarction, heart failure, stroke, unstable ventricular arrhythmias, pulmonary embolism, pneumonia, respiratory failure, dialysis dependent renal failure, large pleural or peritoneal effusions, major bleeding, major wound and surgical site healing complications, vascular graft thrombosis, and 30-day mortality.
Time Frame
30 day after surgery
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
1 Year Mortality
Description
All-cause mortality
Time Frame
1 year after surgery

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
40 Years
Maximum Age & Unit of Time
90 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Age ≥40 years old. Major non-cardiac surgical procedures scheduled to take ≥ two hours done under general anesthesia. Written informed consent Exclusion Criteria: Recent intravenous or oral steroid therapy (within 30 days); inhaled steroids are permitted Any contraindications to the proposed interventions ASA Physical Status > 4 Non English speaking patients Procedures done under regional anesthesia
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Basem Abdelmalak, MD
Organizational Affiliation
The Cleveland Clinic
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Cleveland Clinic
City
Cleveland
State/Province
Ohio
ZIP/Postal Code
44195
Country
United States

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Citations:
PubMed Identifier
26897443
Citation
Abdelmalak BB, Duncan AE, Bonilla A, Yang D, Parra-Sanchez I, Fergany A, Irefin SA, Sessler DI. The intraoperative glycemic response to intravenous insulin during noncardiac surgery: a subanalysis of the DeLiT randomized trial. J Clin Anesth. 2016 Mar;29:19-29. doi: 10.1016/j.jclinane.2015.10.005. Epub 2016 Feb 2.
Results Reference
derived
PubMed Identifier
23539236
Citation
Abdelmalak BB, Bonilla A, Mascha EJ, Maheshwari A, Tang WH, You J, Ramachandran M, Kirkova Y, Clair D, Walsh RM, Kurz A, Sessler DI. Dexamethasone, light anaesthesia, and tight glucose control (DeLiT) randomized controlled trial. Br J Anaesth. 2013 Aug;111(2):209-21. doi: 10.1093/bja/aet050. Epub 2013 Mar 28.
Results Reference
derived
PubMed Identifier
21598057
Citation
Abdelmalak B, Maheshwari A, Kovaci B, Mascha EJ, Cywinski JB, Kurz A, Kashyap VS, Sessler DI. Validation of the DeLiT Trial intravenous insulin infusion algorithm for intraoperative glucose control in noncardiac surgery: a randomized controlled trial. Can J Anaesth. 2011 Jul;58(7):606-616. doi: 10.1007/s12630-011-9509-3. Epub 2011 May 20.
Results Reference
derived

Learn more about this trial

The Effects of Corticosteroids, Glucose Control, and Depth-of-Anesthesia on Perioperative Inflammation and Morbidity From Major Non-cardiac Surgery (Dexamethasone, Light Anesthesia and Tight Glucose Control (DeLiT Trial))

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