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Rationale and design of the STeroids to REduce Systemic inflammation after infant heart Surgery (STRESS) trial

Authors :
Kevin D. Hill
H. Scott Baldwin
David P. Bichel
Ryan J. Butts
Reid C. Chamberlain
Alicia M. Ellis
Eric M. Graham
Jesse Hickerson
Christoph P. Hornik
Jeffrey P. Jacobs
Marshall L. Jacobs
Robert DB Jaquiss
Prince J. Kannankeril
Sean M. O'Brien
Rachel Torok
Joseph W. Turek
Jennifer S. Li
Andrew H. Van Bergen
Eric Wald
Ashraf Resheidat
David F. Vener
James Jaggers
S. Ram Kumar
James St. Louis
Jim Hammel
David Overman
Brian Blasiole
Jake P. Scott
Alexis L. Benscoter
Tara Karamlou
William J. Ravekes
George Ofori-Amanfo
Jason R. Buckley
Sinai C. Zyblewski
Patrick McConnell
Brett R. Anderson
Darlene Santana-Acosta
Pirooz Eghtesady
Mark Bleiweis
Michael Swartz
S. Adil Husain
Linda Lambert
Venugopal Amula
Rusty Eckhauser
Eric Griffiths
Richard Williams
Madolin Witte
LuAnn Minich
Source :
Am Heart J
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

For decades, physicians have administered corticosteroids in the perioperative period to infants undergoing heart surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) to reduce the post-operative systemic inflammatory response to CPB. Some question this practice because steroid efficacy has not been conclusively demonstrated and because some studies indicate that steroids could have harmful effects. STRESS is a randomized, placebo-controlled, double blind, multi-center trial designed to evaluate safety and efficacy of perioperative steroids in infants (age < 1 year) undergoing heart surgery with CPB. Participants (planned enrollment = 1200) are randomized 1:1 to methylprednisolone (30mg/kg) administered into the CPB pump prime versus placebo. The trial is nested within the existing infrastructure of the Society of Thoracic Surgeons Congenital Heart Surgery Database (STS-CHSD). The primary outcome is a global rank score of mortality, major morbidities and hospital length of stay with components ranked commensurate with their clinical severity. Secondary outcomes include several measures of major post-operative morbidity, post-operative hospital length of stay and steroid-related safety outcomes including prevalence of hyperglycemia and post-operative infectious complications. STRESS will be one of the largest trials ever conducted in children with heart disease and will answer a decades old question related to safety and efficacy of perioperative steroids in infants undergoing heart surgery with CPB. The pragmatic “trial within a registry” design may provide a mechanism for conducting low cost, high efficiency trials in a heretofore-understudied patient population. Trial Registration Number

Details

ISSN :
10976744
Volume :
220
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American heart journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9eb96ea531b4db37fe9b7773890f9ecc