The evolution of mean arterial pressure in critically ill patients on vasopressors before and during a trial comparing a specific mean arterial pressure target to usual care

Marie-Hélène Masse(Université de Sherbrooke), Neill K. J. Adhikari(Sunnybrook Health Science Centre), Xavier Théroux(Université de Sherbrooke), Marie‐Claude Battista(Université de Sherbrooke), Frédérick D’Aragon(Université de Sherbrooke), Ruxandra Pinto(Sunnybrook Health Science Centre), Alan A. Cohen(Université de Sherbrooke), Michaël Mayette(Université de Sherbrooke), Charles St-Arnaud(Université de Sherbrooke), Michelle E. Kho(McMaster University), Michaël Chassé(Université de Montréal), Martine Lebrasseur(Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal), Irene Watpool(Ottawa Hospital), Rebecca Porteous(Ottawa Hospital), M. Elizabeth Wilcox(University of Toronto), François Lamontagne(Université de Sherbrooke)
BMC Anesthesiology
January 3, 2022
Cited by 27Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: In randomized clinical controlled trials, the choice of usual care as the comparator may be associated with better clinician uptake of the study protocol and lead to more generalizable results. However, if care processes evolve to resemble the intervention during the course of a trial, differences between the intervention group and usual care control group may narrow. We evaluated the effect on mean arterial pressure of an unblinded trial comparing a lower mean arterial pressure target to reduce vasopressor exposure, vs. a clinician-selected mean arterial pressure target, in critically ill patients at least 65 years old. METHODS: For this multicenter observational study using data collected both prospectively and retrospectively, patients were recruited from five of the seven trial sites. We compared the mean arterial pressure of patients receiving vasopressors, who met or would have met trial eligibility criteria, from two periods: [1] at least 1 month before the trial started, and [2] during the trial period and randomized to usual care, or not enrolled in the trial. RESULTS: We included 200 patients treated before and 229 after trial initiation. There were no differences in age (mean 74.5 vs. 75.2 years; p = 0.28), baseline Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II score (median 26 vs. 26; p = 0.47) or history of chronic hypertension (n = 126 [63.0%] vs. n = 153 [66.8%]; p = 0.41). Mean of the mean arterial pressure was similar between the two periods (72.5 vs. 72.4 mmHg; p = 0.76). CONCLUSIONS: The initiation of a trial of a prescribed lower mean arterial pressure target, compared to a usual clinician-selected target, was not associated with a change in mean arterial pressure, reflecting stability in the net effect of usual clinician practices over time. Comparing prior and concurrent control groups may alleviate concerns regarding drift in usual practices over the course of a trial or permit quantification of any change.


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