Back to Search Start Over

Impact of Methylprednisolone on Postoperative Quality of Recovery and Delirium in the Steroids in Cardiac Surgery Trial: A Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled Substudy

Authors :
Colin F, Royse
Leif, Saager
Richard, Whitlock
Jared, Ou-Young
Alistair, Royse
Jessica, Vincent
P J, Devereaux
Andrea, Kurz
Ahmed, Awais
Krit, Panjasawatwong
Daniel I, Sessler
Source :
Anesthesiology. 126(2)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Inflammation after cardiopulmonary bypass may contribute to postoperative delirium and cognitive dysfunction. The authors evaluated the effect of high-dose methylprednisolone to suppress inflammation on the incidence of delirium and postoperative quality of recovery after cardiac surgery.Five hundred fifty-five adults from three hospitals enrolled in the randomized, double-blind Steroids in Cardiac Surgery trial were randomly allocated to placebo or 250 mg methylprednisolone at induction and 250 mg methylprednisolone before cardiopulmonary bypass. Each completed the Postoperative Quality of Recovery Scale before surgery and on days 1, 2, and 3 and 1 and 6 months after surgery and the Confusion Assessment Method scale for delirium on days 1, 2, and 3. Recovery was defined as returning to preoperative values or improvement at each time point.Four hundred eighty-two participants for recovery and 498 participants for delirium were available for analysis. The quality of recovery improved over time but without differences between groups in the primary endpoint of overall recovery (odds ratio range over individual time points for methylprednisolone, 0.39 to 1.45; 95% CI, 0.08-2.04 to 0.40-5.27; P = 0.943) or individual recovery domains (all P0.05). The incidence of delirium was 10% (control) versus 8% (methylprednisolone; P = 0.357), with no differences in delirium subdomains (all P0.05). In participants with normal (51%) and low baseline cognition (49%), there were no significant differences favoring methylprednisolone in any domain (all P0.05). Recovery was worse in patients with postoperative delirium in the cognitive (P = 0.004) and physiologic (P0.001) domains.High-dose intraoperative methylprednisolone neither reduces delirium nor improves the quality of recovery in high-risk cardiac surgical patients.

Details

ISSN :
15281175
Volume :
126
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Anesthesiology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........d1b179e699ac2e98e6aeed17a8437470