Reduced exposure to vasopressors through permissive hypotension to reduce mortality in critically ill people aged 65 and over: The 65 RCT

Paul R. Mouncey, Alvin Richards-Belle, Karen Thomas, David A. Harrison, M. Zia Sadique, Richard D. Grieve, Julie Camsooksai, Robert Darnell, Anthony C. Gordon, Doreen Henry, Nicholas Hudson, Alexina J. Mason, Michelle Saull, Chris Whitman, J. Duncan Young, François Lamontagne, Kathryn M. Rowan, Petra Polgarova, Peter Featherstone, Sofia TeixeiraColette Jones-Criddle, Ben Morton, Ian Turner-Bone, Laura Wilding, Gail Quigley, Noel Hemmings, Adrian Donnelly, Aidan Campbell, Sinéad O’Kane, Emma McKay, Paul Johnston, Orla O’Neill, Emma Totten, Nadine Weeks, Paul Jeanrenaud, Cathy Jones, Reni Jacob, Ron Mathew Jacob, Maria Alpuerto, Antony Ashton, Denise Griffin, McDonald Mupudzi, Jason Cuppitt, Emma Stoddard, Gemma Brown, Jazmine McCooey, Lisa Grimmer, Jeremy Bewley, Katie Sweet, Chloe Searles, Rebecca Keskeys, Jayachandran Radhakrishnan, Fiona McNeela, Sue Smolen, Laura Curran, David Antcliffe, Roceld Rojo, Kim Zantua, Helen Robertson, Lyndsay Cheater, Maria Faulkner, Laura Parry, Phillipa Wakefield, Zakaulla Belagodu, Danielle Vosper, Carmel Stuart, Binu Ravindran, Amanda Cowton, James Limb, Julie O’Brien, Rosalyn Squires, Sam Waddy, Esme Elloway, Helen McMillan, Sarah Williams, Andrew Ball, Patricia Williams, Sharon Hiscox, Sarah Horton, Ulla Chappell, Igor Otahal, Peter Havalda, Samantha Coetzee, Kelly Matthews, Andrew Foo, Izzy King, Kirsty Manns, Sonia Sousa Arias, Stephen Brett, Leilani Cabreros, Rhoda Rosal, Stephanie Bell, Kate Turner, Vanessa Rivers, Susan Brixey, Lindsay Garcia, Judith Wright, Keith Hugill, Susan Mortimer, Nicola Cree, Fiona Bartley, Philip Hopkins, Su Jeffreys, Harriet Noble, Clare Finney, Louise Houslip, Neil Flint, Dawn Hales, Prematie Andreou, Iain McLaren, Carina Cruz, Sunil Jamadarkhana, Naomi Brice, Katie Goodyer, Richard Clark, Jonathan Bannard-Smith, Emma Connaughton, Abigail Williams, Amanda Cameron, Rahuldeb Sarkar, Vongayi Ogbeide, Mary Everett, Ceri Battle, Milercy Oliveros, Tracy Owen, Sharon Storton, Patricia Doble, Richard Innes, Joanne Hutter, Stephen Harris, Georgina Randell, Steve Hutchinson, Deirdre Fottrell-Gould, Lisa Hudig, Tracey Shanley, Guy Rousseau, Max Coupe King, Nicolas Stafford, Joy Grewcock, Jonathan Wilkinson, Kathryn Hall, Lorraine Campey, Joanne Pons, Gary Mills, Sarah Bird, Joshua Cooper, Alan Pope, Matthew Davies, Coralie Carle, Nicola Butterworth-Cowin, Loran Davies, Alastair Rose, Sarah Buckley, Lucy Brooks, Sarah Smith, Henrik Reschreiter, Sarah Patch, Sarah Jenkins, Olivia Rowe, Tom Williams, Emma Clarey, Jane Wilson, Jenny Ritzema, Vanessa Linnett, Amanda Sanderson, Steve Rose, David Pogson, Zoe Daly, Aimi Collins, Amy Collins, Ashraf Roshdy, Ahmed Zaki, Estefania Treus, Yvonna Marasigan, Lucy Ryan, Daniel Harvey, Megan Meredith, Louise Hughes, Nicola Jacques, Andrew Walden, Parminder Bhuie, Aoife Dowling, Sarah Bean, Jonathan Paddle, Karen Burt, Caroline Aherne, Justin Roberts, Rebecca Crosby, Carole Boulanger, Charly Gibson, Sinead Kelly, Ceri Lynch, Bethan Gibson, Lisa Roche, Keri Turner, Kelly Thomas, Gemma Hodkinson, Tamas Szakmany, Una Gunter, Samantha Hendry, Ingeborg Welters, Karen Williams, Victoria Waugh, Ian Angus, Redmond Tully, Karen Hallett, Susan Dermody, Mark Verlander, Shondipon Laha, Alexandra Williams, Donna Doyle, David Cartlidge, Moses Chikungwa, Minnie Gellamucho, Ruth Salt, Patricia Piercy, Ian Clement, Leigh Dunn, Carmen Bradshaw, Abigail Harrison, Davinder Kaur, Mike Reay, Vikram Anumakonda, Rachel Collins, Angela Watts, Julie Matthews, Alexandra Larkin, Paul Ferris, Kathryn Cawley, Joy Dearden, Beverley Faulkner, Matt Thomas, Kati Hayes, Ruth Worner, Dorota Banach, Anthony Gordon, John Adams, Maie Templeton, Aneta Bociek, Marlies Ostermann, Simon Sparkes, Ruth Wan, Andrea Kelly, Joanne Holman, Thomas Clark, Alison Cornwell, Ilona Cassar, David Golden, Joanne Jones, Miriam Davey, Thomas Billyard, Geraldine Ward, Laura Wild, Pamela Bremmer, Christopher Bassford, Rosaleeta Reece-Anthony, Waqas Khaliq, Jayson Clarke, Babita Gurung, Michele Clark, Farooq Brohi, Tracey Oldfield, Sophie Mason, Ben Attwood, Camilla Stagg, Penny Parsons, Carl Boswell, Neil Anthony Richardson, Tracy Hazelton, Natasha Schumacher, Nicholas Dalmon, Jenny Lord, David Helm, Charalice Ramiro, Jordi Margalef, Liliana Silva, Agnieszka Kubisz-Pudelko, Alison Lewis, Johnyta Panakal, Danielle Wilcox, Jonathan Redman, Joseph Carter, Kate Howard

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Vasopressors are administered to critical care patients to avoid hypotension, which is associated with myocardial injury, kidney injury and death. However, they work by causing vasoconstriction, which may reduce blood flow and cause other adverse effects. A mean arterial pressure target typically guides administration. An individual patient data meta-analysis (Lamontagne F, Day AG, Meade MO, Cook DJ, Guyatt GH, Hylands M, et al. Pooled analysis of higher versus lower blood pressure targets for vasopressor therapy septic and vasodilatory shock. Intensive Care Med 2018;44:12-21) suggested that greater exposure, through higher mean arterial pressure targets, may increase risk of death in older patients. Objective: To estimate the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of reduced vasopressor exposure through permissive hypotension (i.e. a lower mean arterial pressure target of 60-65 mmHg) in older critically ill patients. Design: A pragmatic, randomised clinical trial with integrated economic evaluation. Setting: Sixty-five NHS adult general critical care units. Participants: Critically ill patients aged ≥ 65 years receiving vasopressors for vasodilatory hypotension. Interventions: Intervention - permissive hypotension (i.e. a mean arterial pressure target of 60-65 mmHg). Control (usual care) - a mean arterial pressure target at the treating clinician’s discretion. Main outcome measures: The primary clinical outcome was 90-day all-cause mortality. The primary cost-effectiveness outcome was 90-day incremental net monetary benefit. Secondary outcomes included receipt and duration of advanced respiratory and renal support, mortality at critical care and acute hospital discharge, and questionnaire assessment of cognitive decline and health-related quality of life at 90 days and 1 year. Results: Of 2600 patients randomised, 2463 (permissive hypotension, n = 1221; usual care, n = 1242) were analysed for the primary clinical outcome. Permissive hypotension resulted in lower exposure to vasopressors than usual care [mean duration 46.0 vs. 55.9 hours, difference -9.9 hours (95% confidence interval -14.3 to -5.5 hours); total noradrenaline-equivalent dose 31.5 mg vs. 44.3 mg, difference -12.8mg (95% CI -18.0mg to -17.6 mg)]. By 90 days, 500 (41.0%) patients in the permissive hypotension group and 544 (43.8%) patients in the usual-care group had died (absolute risk difference -2.85%, 95% confidence interval -6.75% to 1.05%; p = 0.154). Adjustment for prespecified baseline variables resulted in an odds ratio for 90-day mortality of 0.82 (95% confidence interval 0.68 to 0.98) favouring permissive hypotension. There were no significant differences in prespecified secondary outcomes or subgroups; however, patients with chronic hypertension showed a mortality difference favourable to permissive hypotension. At 90 days, permissive hypotension showed similar costs to usual care. However, with higher incremental life-years and quality-adjusted life-years in the permissive hypotension group, the incremental net monetary benefit was positive, but with high statistical uncertainty (£378, 95% confidence interval -£1347 to £2103). Limitations: The intervention was unblinded, with risk of bias minimised through central allocation concealment and a primary outcome not subject to observer bias. The control group event rate was higher than anticipated. Conclusions: In critically ill patients aged ≥ 65 years receiving vasopressors for vasodilatory hypotension, permissive hypotension did not significantly reduce 90-day mortality compared with usual care. The absolute treatment effect on 90-day mortality, based on 95% confidence intervals, was between a 6.8-percentage reduction and a 1.1-percentage increase in mortality. Future work: Future work should (1) update the individual patient data meta-analysis, (2) explore approaches for evaluating heterogeneity of treatment effect and (3) explore 65 trial conduct, including use of deferred consent, to inform future trials. Trial registration: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN10580502.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)VII-77
JournalHealth Technology Assessment
Volume25
Issue number14
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021
Externally publishedYes

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Reduced exposure to vasopressors through permissive hypotension to reduce mortality in critically ill people aged 65 and over: The 65 RCT'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this