BACKGROUND: Acute postoperative hypertension is a well-known complication of cardiac surgery and is associated with postoperative morbidity. Clevidipine, an ultrashort-acting, third-generation dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker, exerts vascular-selective, arterial-specific vasodilation to decrease arterial blood pressure without negatively impacting cardiac function. In this double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, we examined the efficacy and safety of clevidipine in treating postoperative hypertension in cardiac surgery patients. METHODS:Two hundred six patients undergoing cardiac surgery were randomized preoperatively. Of these, 110 met postrandomization inclusion criteria for the study [systolic blood pressure (SBP) >or=140 mm Hg within 4 h of admission to a postoperative setting, and clinically assessed as needing SBP reduction by >or=15% from baseline]. Patients received an infusion of either clevidipine (0.4-8.0 microg kg(-1) min(-1)) or 20% lipid emulsion (placebo) for 30 min to a maximum of 1 h unless treatment failure occurred sooner. The primary end point was the incidence of treatment failure, defined as the inability to decrease SBP by >or=15% from baseline, or the discontinuation of study treatment for any reason within the 30-min period after study drug initiation. RESULTS:Clevidipine-treated patients had a significantly lower incidence of treatment failure than placebo patients [8.2% (5 of 61) vs 79.6% (39 of 49), P < 0.0001]. Treatment success was achieved in 91.8% of clevidipine-treated patients. Median time to target SBP with clevidipine was 5.3 min (95% confidence interval, 4-7 min). No clinically significant increase in heart rate from baseline was observed. Adverse event rates were similar for both treatment groups. CONCLUSIONS:Clevidipine is effective and safe in the rapid treatment of acute postoperative hypertension after cardiac surgery.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND:Acute postoperative hypertension is a well-known complication of cardiac surgery and is associated with postoperative morbidity. Clevidipine, an ultrashort-acting, third-generation dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker, exerts vascular-selective, arterial-specific vasodilation to decrease arterial blood pressure without negatively impacting cardiac function. In this double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, we examined the efficacy and safety of clevidipine in treating postoperative hypertension in cardiac surgery patients. METHODS: Two hundred six patients undergoing cardiac surgery were randomized preoperatively. Of these, 110 met postrandomization inclusion criteria for the study [systolic blood pressure (SBP) >or=140 mm Hg within 4 h of admission to a postoperative setting, and clinically assessed as needing SBP reduction by >or=15% from baseline]. Patients received an infusion of either clevidipine (0.4-8.0 microg kg(-1) min(-1)) or 20% lipid emulsion (placebo) for 30 min to a maximum of 1 h unless treatment failure occurred sooner. The primary end point was the incidence of treatment failure, defined as the inability to decrease SBP by >or=15% from baseline, or the discontinuation of study treatment for any reason within the 30-min period after study drug initiation. RESULTS:Clevidipine-treated patients had a significantly lower incidence of treatment failure than placebo patients [8.2% (5 of 61) vs 79.6% (39 of 49), P < 0.0001]. Treatment success was achieved in 91.8% of clevidipine-treated patients. Median time to target SBP with clevidipine was 5.3 min (95% confidence interval, 4-7 min). No clinically significant increase in heart rate from baseline was observed. Adverse event rates were similar for both treatment groups. CONCLUSIONS:Clevidipine is effective and safe in the rapid treatment of acute postoperative hypertension after cardiac surgery.
Authors: David B Tulman; Stanislaw P A Stawicki; Thomas J Papadimos; Claire V Murphy; Sergio D Bergese Journal: Discov Med Date: 2012-05 Impact factor: 2.970
Authors: Joseph D Tobias; William S Schechter; Alistair Phillips; Samuel Weinstein; Robert Michler; John W Berkenbosch; Carlos Montoya Journal: J Pediatr Pharmacol Ther Date: 2011-01
Authors: W Frank Peacock; Jorge E Angeles; Karina M Soto; Philip D Lumb; Joseph Varon Journal: Ther Clin Risk Manag Date: 2009-08-03 Impact factor: 2.423