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Prevention of intraoperative awareness in a high-risk surgical population Rachel Brunette RN, BSN, SRNA Oakland University-Beaumont Graduate Program of Nurse Anesthesia
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Avidan, MS; Burnside, BA; Glick, D:Jacobsohn, E; Zhang, L. (2011) Prevention of Intraoperative Awareness in a High Risk Surgical Population. The New England Journal of Medicine 365(7), 591-600.
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Anesthesia awareness Awareness during anesthesia occurs in 20,000–40,000 patients out of the 20 million US surgeries performed each year (between 0.1% and 0.2%) Defined as the experience and explicit recall of sensory perceptions during surgery. May lead to PTSD.
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About the trial Published in the New England Journal of Medicine Aug 18, 2011 The study was randomized, evaluator blinded on 6,041 patients at three major medical centers. Univeristy of Chicago, Washington University in St. Louis, University of Manitoba
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BIS MONITORING Provides depth of consciousness and sedation monitoring Uses multiple EEG signal processing Single number represents actual number of cerebral electrical activity Low probability of Recall/Memory 40-60 BIS reading of 100 is fully awake and alert
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ETAC End-tidal anesthetic-agent concentration for the prevention of awareness An audible alarm was set to indicate when the ETAC fell below 0.7 or exceeded 1.3 age- adjusted MAC If alarm settings were unavailable for ETAC, alarms were set for inspired anesthetic agents.
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WHY? Simple protocol based interventions can decrease perioperative complications. If BIS monitor is effective then technology can be used to clinically benefit patients and prevent intraoperative awareness
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Who? Patients 18 yo or older Undergoing elective surgery with the use of Isoflurane, Sevoflurane, or Desflurane. High Risk for intraoperative awareness (See table 1) Drug tolerance, fat distribution, age, obesity Pts with dementia, unable to provide written consent, or history of CVA with residual neurological deficits excluded
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Study Design 6,100 pre-randomized designations generated electronically in blocks of 100. Labels indicated BIS or ETAC and sealed in opaque numbered envelopes. Informed consent was obtained Anesthesia providers were aware of patients’ group assignments but the patients, postoperative interviewers, expert reviewers, and statistician were not
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Procedure BIS sensor was applied to forehead of each patient ETAC group had monitors configured to conceal the BIS number. Anesthesia practitioners in both groups were able to view the ETAC Sign was placed on the anesthesia machines reminding practitioners to check the BIS or ETAC value. Practitioners could decrease anesthetic administration at their discretion if a patient’s condition was hemodynamically unstable Results recorded on Metavision electronically with a minimum of every one minute.
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Questionnaire Intraoperative awareness was assessed by a modified Brice questionnaire. (designed to evaluate intraop awareness under anesthesia) Evaluated within 72 hours after surgery and at 30 days post extubation If patients reported memories from “going to sleep” to “waking up” they were contacted by a different evaluator. Referred to a psychologist Three experts independently reviewed the responses and determined if the patient had definite awareness, possible awareness, or no awareness.
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Hypothesis Null hypothesis=BIS protocol is not superior to the ETAC protocol in preventing intraoperative awareness Alternative hypothesis= BIS protocol is superior in preventing intraoperative awareness.
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Methods Chi-square test- compares observed data we would expect to obtain according to specific hypothesis Fishers exact test-used to determine if there are non- random associations between two categorical variables. Unpaired Mann-Whitney U test- (rank sum test) Nonparametric test that compares two unpaired groups Unpaired student’s t-test-Used to compare two small sets of quantitative data when samples are collected independent or one another. Modified intention-to-treat analysis was performed P-values <0.05 were considered to indicate statistical significance
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Patients Of an estimated 49,000 patients screened, 6,041 were enrolled. 25-month period from May 2008-May 2010 5,809 patients were included in the trial of whom 5713 (98.3%) completed at least one postoperative interview and were included in the primary outcome analysis.
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Results 49 patients reported memories of the period between “going to sleep” and “waking up” at the end of surgery. Experts determined that 9 patients had definite intraoperative awareness and 27 patients had definite or possible awareness. There were fewer cases of awareness in the ETAC group than BIS group.
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Results A total of 7 or 2,861 patients (0.24%) in the BIS group compared with 2 of 2,852 (0.07%) in the ETAC group that were interviewed postoperatively had definite awareness. Superiority of the BIS protocol was not demonstrated 19 cases of definite or possible intraoperative awareness (o.66%) occurred in the BIS group, as compared with 8 (o.28%) in the ETAC group.
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Results The patients who experienced awareness or possible awareness did not have either a BIS>60 or ETAC values less than 0.7 age- adjusted MAC. No major differences in doses of sedative, hypnotic, opioid analgesic, or neuromuscular blocking drugs administered between the two groups.
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Limitations ETAC protocol was evaluated against only one of many EEG monitors. Practitioners may become desensitized to audible alerts. Some patients were not interviewed due to not awakening and passed away before the initial interview. Unidentified risk factors such as genetic resistance to anesthetic agents could have been unequally distributed between the two groups.
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Summary Anesthesia awareness is not extremely common but a very serious complication of surgery Graphs on the study were difficult to view on this study Only tested one monitor VIGALENCE IS KEY!
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Questions?
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