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Goal Directed Fluid Administration for Kidney Transplantation

The Effect of Non-Invasive Goal Directed Fluid Administration on Graft Function in Kidney Transplantation

Status
Completed
Phases
Early Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02192086
Enrollment
21
Registered
2014-07-16
Start date
2012-08-31
Completion date
2014-07-31
Last updated
2018-04-10

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

End Stage Renal Disease

Keywords

Kidney transplantation

Brief summary

The goal of the proposed study is to evaluate the efficacy of a goal-directed fluid administration algorithm on early graft function in patients undergoing kidney transplantation. Fluid administration has increasingly been scrutinized within anesthesia related literature as an area for improvement, and the imbalance present between estimated blood loss and total fluid administered for kidney transplants must be amongst the highest case categories. Considering the patients are anuric for the majority of the procedure, unguided administration of multiple liters of crystalloid appears antiquated.

Interventions

The treatment group will initially be given a 1L bolus after induction over 20 minutes (first liter may be Lactated Ringers solution or Plasmalyte, subsequent fluid will be Plasmalyte) followed by maintenance infusion at a rate of 5mL/kg/hr until the graft kidney is removed from ice. After removing the organ from ice, the kidney recipient will be administered supplemental crystalloid until PVI is 10 or lower. Plasmalyte will be warmed in accordance to the departmental hypothermia protocol. A PVI of 12 or lower will be maintained until emergence of anesthesia, at which time the PVI monitor will be removed and all patients will be managed by existing standards (pain control, fluid replacement, hemodynamic goals, etc). a.At the time the treatment group begins receiving goal directed fluid therapy the anesthesia team is to wean any vasopressors aggressively with the goal of terminating infusion as quickly as is safe.

OTHERControl Group

Control patients will be given a constant infusion of crystalloid (first liter may be Lactated Ringers solution or Plasmalyte, subsequent fluid will be Plasmalyte) at a rate determined by the following: 70mL/kg for the duration of the surgery, 1L bolus after induction (over 20-30 minutes) followed by the remainder as a constant infusion determined by (70mL/kg \* wt - 1000mL) / 160 minutes (using the local average of approximately 180 minutes of operative time). a.A Masimo PVI monitor will be placed on the patient on an extremity not affected by an AV fistula and recorded for evaluation, but no fluid administration decisions will be made based on it (providers will not have access to its values).

Sponsors

Medical University of South Carolina
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* end stage renal disease requiring dialysis * age \>18y * normal cognitive function.

Exclusion criteria

* severe left ventricular dysfunction (EF\<50%) * known cardiomyopathy * symptomatic CAD known valvular disease * severe anemia (Hgb\<7.0) * patients with prior transplants o * patients who suffered surgical complications as communicated by the surgical team. We chose these

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Effect of Plethysmography Directed Fluid Administration Tranplanted Kidney1 yearTo determine the effect of plethysmography directed fluid administration on the incidence of delayed graft function in kidney transplantation.The treatment group will recieve fluid in a well described short period around the time of anastomosis based on a fingertip adhesive monitor. By preventing hypovolemia at the time of reperfusion, we expect the transplanted kidney to demonstrate improved function in the near term.
Pleth Variability1 yearPleth Variability Index (PVI) is a validated non-invasive monitoring method used to assess intravascular volume status, and may prove superior to dosing fluids based on existing parameters (heart rate, blood pressure, anecdotal protocols).

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026