Treatment threshold for intra-operative hypotension in clinical practice—a prospective cohort study in older patients in the UK. Wickham, A. J., Highton, D. T., Clark, S., Fallaha, D., Wong, D. J. N., Martin, D. S., the Research, & of Trainees*, A. F. Anaesthesia, 77(2):153–163, 2022. _eprint: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/anae.15535
Treatment threshold for intra-operative hypotension in clinical practice—a prospective cohort study in older patients in the UK [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Intra-operative hypotension frequently complicates anaesthesia in older patients and is implicated in peri-operative organ hypoperfusion and injury. The prevalence and corresponding treatment thresholds of hypotension are incompletely described in the UK. This study aimed to identify prevalence of intra-operative hypotension and its treatment thresholds in UK practice. Patients aged ≥ 65 years were studied prospectively from 196 UK hospitals within a 48-hour timeframe. The primary outcome was the incidence of hypotension (mean arterial pressure \textless65 mmHg; systolic blood pressure reduction \textgreater20%; systolic blood pressure \textless100 mmHg). Secondary outcomes included the treatment blood pressure threshold for vasopressors; incidence of acute kidney injury; myocardial injury; stroke; and in-hospital mortality. Additionally, anaesthetists providing care for included patients were asked to complete a survey assessing their intended treatment thresholds for hypotension. Data were collected from 4750 patients. Hypotension affected 61.0% of patients when defined as mean arterial pressure \textless65 mmHg, 91.3% of patients had \textgreater20% reduction in systolic blood pressure from baseline and 77.5% systolic blood pressure \textless100 mmHg. The mean (SD) blood pressure triggering vasopressor therapy was mean arterial pressure 64.2 (11.6) mmHg and the mean (SD) stated intended treatment threshold from the survey was mean arterial pressure 60.6 (9.7) mmHg. A composite adverse outcome of myocardial injury, kidney injury, stroke or death affected 345 patients (7.3%). In this representative sample of UK peri-operative practice, the majority of older patients experienced intra-operative hypotension and treatment was delivered below suggested thresholds. This highlights both potential for intra-operative organ injury and substantial opportunity for improving treatment of intra-operative hypotension.
@article{wickham_treatment_2022,
	title = {Treatment threshold for intra-operative hypotension in clinical practice—a prospective cohort study in older patients in the {UK}},
	volume = {77},
	copyright = {© 2021 Association of Anaesthetists},
	issn = {1365-2044},
	url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/anae.15535},
	doi = {10.1111/anae.15535},
	abstract = {Intra-operative hypotension frequently complicates anaesthesia in older patients and is implicated in peri-operative organ hypoperfusion and injury. The prevalence and corresponding treatment thresholds of hypotension are incompletely described in the UK. This study aimed to identify prevalence of intra-operative hypotension and its treatment thresholds in UK practice. Patients aged ≥ 65 years were studied prospectively from 196 UK hospitals within a 48-hour timeframe. The primary outcome was the incidence of hypotension (mean arterial pressure {\textless}65 mmHg; systolic blood pressure reduction {\textgreater}20\%; systolic blood pressure {\textless}100 mmHg). Secondary outcomes included the treatment blood pressure threshold for vasopressors; incidence of acute kidney injury; myocardial injury; stroke; and in-hospital mortality. Additionally, anaesthetists providing care for included patients were asked to complete a survey assessing their intended treatment thresholds for hypotension. Data were collected from 4750 patients. Hypotension affected 61.0\% of patients when defined as mean arterial pressure {\textless}65 mmHg, 91.3\% of patients had {\textgreater}20\% reduction in systolic blood pressure from baseline and 77.5\% systolic blood pressure {\textless}100 mmHg. The mean (SD) blood pressure triggering vasopressor therapy was mean arterial pressure 64.2 (11.6) mmHg and the mean (SD) stated intended treatment threshold from the survey was mean arterial pressure 60.6 (9.7) mmHg. A composite adverse outcome of myocardial injury, kidney injury, stroke or death affected 345 patients (7.3\%). In this representative sample of UK peri-operative practice, the majority of older patients experienced intra-operative hypotension and treatment was delivered below suggested thresholds. This highlights both potential for intra-operative organ injury and substantial opportunity for improving treatment of intra-operative hypotension.},
	language = {en},
	number = {2},
	urldate = {2024-09-20},
	journal = {Anaesthesia},
	author = {Wickham, A. J. and Highton, D. T. and Clark, S. and Fallaha, D. and Wong, D. J. N. and Martin, D. S. and {the Research and Audit Federation of Trainees*}},
	year = {2022},
	note = {\_eprint: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/anae.15535},
	keywords = {acute kidney injury, aged, hypotension, peri-operative care, postoperative complications, stroke},
	pages = {153--163},
}

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