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Hydrocortisone Plus Fludrocortisone in High-risk Patients Undergoing for Cardiac Surgery
Sponsor: Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, Amiens
Summary
Cardiac surgery is a high-risk surgery and is associated with a rate of postoperative adverse outcomes. Like many others major surgery, cardiac surgery procedures induce a proinflammatory phase usually counterbalanced with an immunosuppressive phase so the immune response remained balanced. In some cases, the immune response might be dysregulated with a more pronounced pro inflammatory state that compromises organ perfusion and with the occurrence of organ failure. From a mechanistic approach, the relationship between organ failure is complex and multifactorial with a high level of proinflammatory cytokines, a decrease in microcirculation, an endothelial dysfunction and an activation of coagulation and over. The clinical expression is an increase in vasopressor exposure and dose, an increase in mortality and in adverse outcomes with a predominance of acute kidney injury. Various therapies have been assessed to manage cardiac surgery related sepsis including glucocorticoid therapy. Briefly, two major randomized trials assessed glucocorticoid therapy solely in scheduled cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass. No clinical benefit was demonstrated in term of reduction in postoperative mortality or adverse outcomes. Since, data support that the selection of patients at risk is crucial to demonstrate such a strategy. Indeed, data support that surprisingly some patients will have a very light immune response reflected by a low pro inflammatory cytokine. The hypothesis is that the combination glucocorticoid and fludrocortisone could decrease adverse outcomes in selected patients.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
196
Start Date
2025-08
Completion Date
2028-06
Last Updated
2025-07-02
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
hydrocortisone plus fludrocortisone
* Hydrocortisone 200 mg/day for 5 days or until ICU discharge, starting at the initiation of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), administered intravenously via syringe pump in a double-blind manner * Fludrocortisone 50 µg/day in the morning for 5 days or until ICU discharge, administered orally or via nasogastric tube (if the patient is sedated), diluted in a glass of water, in a double-blind manner
placebo of hydrocortisone plus fludrocortisone
* Placebo for hydrocortisone (0.9% NaCl) administered following the same protocol as fludrocortisone in the intervention group * Placebo for fludrocortisone (capsule containing microcrystalline cellulose diluted in a glass of water) administered following the same protocol as fludrocortisone in the intervention group
Locations (1)
CHRU Amiens
Amiens, France