Journal of Personalized Medicine (Sep 2022)

Systolic Arterial Pressure Control Using an Automated Closed-Loop System for Vasopressor Infusion during Intermediate-to-High-Risk Surgery: A Feasibility Study

  • Joseph Rinehart,
  • Olivier Desebbe,
  • Antoine Berna,
  • Isaac Lam,
  • Sean Coeckelenbergh,
  • Maxime Cannesson,
  • Alexandre Joosten

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12101554
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
p. 1554

Abstract

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Introduction: Vasopressor infusions are essential in treating and preventing intraoperative hypotension. Closed-loop vasopressor therapy outperforms clinicians when the target is set at a mean arterial pressure (MAP) baseline, but little is known on the performance metrics of closed-loop vasopressor infusions when systolic arterial pressure (SAP) is the controlled variable. Methods: Patients undergoing intermediate- to high-risk abdominal surgery were included in this prospective cohort feasibility study. All patients received norepinephrine infusion through a computer controlled closed-loop system that targeted SAP at 130 mmHg. The primary objective was to determine the percent of case time in hypotension or under target defined as SAP below 10% of the target (SAP 10% of the target or >143 mmHg) and “in target” (within 10% of the SAP target or SAP between 117 and 143 mmHg). Results: A total of 12 patients were included. The closed-loop system infused norepinephrine for a median of 94.6% (25–75th percentile: 90.0–98.0%) of case time. The percentage of case time in hypotension or under target was only 1.8% (0.9–3.6%). The percentages of case time “above target” and “in target” were 4.7% (3.2–7.5%) and 92.4% (90.1–96.3%), respectively. Conclusions: This closed-loop vasopressor system minimizes intraoperative hypotension and maintains SAP within 10% of the target range for >90% of the case time in patients undergoing intermediate- to high-risk abdominal surgery.

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