4.6 Article

Cognitive Outcomes after DEXmedetomidine sedation in cardiac surgery: CODEX randomised controlled trial protocol

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-046851

Keywords

adult anaesthesia; neurology; delirium & cognitive disorders; cardiac surgery; clinical trials; anaesthesia in cardiology

Funding

  1. Dana Foundation [17-13030]
  2. Sunnybrook AFP Association through the Innovation Fund of the Alternative Funding Plan from the Academic Health Sciences Centre of Ontario [SHS-18-010]
  3. department of anesthesia, SHSC

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Older patients undergoing cardiac surgery are at high risk for developing major postoperative neurocognitive disorder (P-NCD), with this multicentre randomised trial investigating the efficacy of postoperative dexmedetomidine sedation in reducing the incidence of major P-NCD. This study is the first to assess the efficacy of a pharmacological intervention to reduce major P-NCD after cardiac surgery in patients aged 60 and older, with dissemination of results to include briefings, presentations, and publications.
Introduction Older patients undergoing cardiac surgery carry the highest risk for developing major postoperative neurocognitive disorder (postoperative NCD or P-NCD) with up to 25% incidence 3 months after surgery. P-NCD is associated with significant morbidity, mortality, loss of independence, premature retirement and increased healthcare costs. This multicentre randomised trial is investigating the efficacy of postoperative dexmedetomidine sedation in reducing the incidence of major P-NCD after cardiac surgery compared with standard protocols. CODEX will be the largest interventional trial with major P-NCD as the primary outcome. Methods and analysis CODEX is recruiting patients >= 60 years old, undergoing elective cardiac surgery and without pre-existing major cognitive dysfunction or dementia. Eligible participants are randomised to receive postoperative dexmedetomidine or standard institutional sedation protocols in the intensive care unit. Baseline preoperative cognitive function is assessed with the computer-based Cogstate Brief Battery. The primary outcome, major P-NCD, 3 months after surgery is defined as a decrease in cognitive function >= 1.96 SD below age-matched, non-operative controls. Secondary outcomes include delirium, major P-NCD at 6/12 months, depressive symptoms, mild P-NCD and quality of surgical recovery at 3/6/12 months. The specific diagnostic criteria used in this protocol are consistent with the recommendations for clinical assessment and management of NCD from the Nomenclature Consensus Working Group on perioperative cognitive changes. Intention-to-treat analysis will compare major P-NCD at 3 months between study groups. Ethics and dissemination CODEX was approved by Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre Research Ethics Board (REB) (Project ID 1743). This will be the first multicentre, randomised controlled trial to assess the efficacy of a pharmacological intervention to reduce the incidence of major P-NCD after cardiac surgery in patients >= 60 years old. Dissemination of the study results will include briefings of key findings and interpretation, conference presentations and peer-reviewed publications.

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