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Low-flow Versus Minimal-flow Sevoflurane Anesthesia During Robot-assisted Laparoscopic Radical Prostatectomy
Sponsor: Ankara City Hospital Bilkent
Summary
Study Synopsis This protocol is formatted for ClinicalTrials.gov-style registration and manuscript-facing documentation. It is based on the uploaded Turkish ethics protocol and keeps the original core design: comparison of low-flow and minimal-flow sevoflurane anesthesia in robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy. Background and Rationale Robot-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy (RALRP) is increasingly preferred for localized prostate cancer because of lower blood loss, reduced transfusion requirements, shorter hospitalization, and lower complication rates compared with open surgery. However, RALRP requires carbon dioxide pneumoperitoneum and steep Trendelenburg positioning, both of which may adversely affect respiratory mechanics, gas exchange, and hemodynamic stability. Low-flow and minimal-flow anesthesia may improve humidification and warming of inspired gases, reduce inhalational agent consumption, decrease environmental waste, and potentially lower overall cost. Despite these theoretical and practical advantages, evidence remains limited regarding the physiologic safety and performance of minimal-flow sevoflurane anesthesia during long robotic pelvic surgery performed under pneumoperitoneum and steep Trendelenburg positioning. Accordingly, this randomized prospective trial will compare low-flow (1 L/min) and minimal-flow (0.5 L/min) sevoflurane anesthesia during RALRP with respect to respiratory parameters, arterial blood gas values, intraoperative oxygenation variables, anesthetic consumption, and selected postoperative biochemical markers.
Official title: A Prospective Randomized Study Comparing Low-Flow (1 L/Min) and Minimal-Flow (0.5 L/Min) Sevoflurane Anesthesia in Patients Undergoing Robot-Assisted Laparoscopic Radical Prostatectomy
Key Details
Gender
MALE
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
70
Start Date
2026-03-20
Completion Date
2026-08-31
Last Updated
2026-03-16
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Interventions
Common Anesthetic Management
Standard intraoperative monitoring including BIS, pulse oximetry, temperature, and anesthesia workstation-derived respiratory variables. * Arterial blood gas sampling after intubation, before pneumoperitoneum, after pneumoperitoneum/positioning, hourly during pneumoperitoneum, at the end of pneumoperitoneum in supine position, and before extubation. * Routine safety limits on the anesthesia machine: end-tidal carbon dioxide upper alarm 45 mmHg, inspired oxygen lower alarm 35%, inspired carbon dioxide upper alarm 3 mmHg. * Routine device self-test each morning and between patients. * Minimal dead space strategy with avoidance of unnecessary circuit extension. * Close monitoring of soda lime; replacement if inspired carbon dioxide reaches 3 mmHg even without obvious color change. * If clinically necessary because of blood gas deterioration, BIS changes, or any safety concern, fresh gas flow may be increased and the participant may be withdrawn from the protocol intervention.