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Evaluating the clinical and cost-effectiveness of permissive hypotension in critically ill patients aged 65 years or over with vasodilatory hypotension: Protocol for the 65 randomised clinical trial

Authors :
Doreen Henry
David A Harrison
Richard Grieve
M Zia Sadique
Paul R Mouncey
Kathryn M Rowan
Chris Whitman
Francois Lamontagne
Julie Camsooksai
Alvin Richards-Belle
Anthony C. Gordon
J Duncan Young
Source :
J Intensive Care Soc
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Vasodilatory shock is common in critically ill patients and vasopressors are a mainstay of therapy. A meta-analysis suggested that use of a higher, as opposed to a lower, mean arterial pressure target to guide titration of vasopressor therapy, could be associated with a higher risk of death in older critically ill patients. The 65 trial is a pragmatic, multi-centre, parallel-group, open-label, randomised clinical trial of permissive hypotension (a mean arterial pressure target of 60–65 mmHg during vasopressor therapy) versus usual care in critically ill patients aged 65 years or over with vasodilatory hypotension. The trial is conducted in 2600 patients from 65 United Kingdom adult, general critical care units. The primary outcome is all-cause mortality at 90 days. An economic evaluation is embedded. The 65 trial received favourable ethical opinion from the South Central – Oxford C Research Ethics Committee and approval from the Health Research Authority. The results will be presented at national and international conferences and published in peer-reviewed medical journals. Trial registration: ISRCTN10580502

Details

ISSN :
17511437
Volume :
21
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the Intensive Care Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2d52a3c48c4470b1b5929f34e0d5cf0a