Comparison of 4% Albumin and Ringer's Acetate on Hemodynamics in On-pump Cardiac Surgery: An Exploratory Analysis of a Randomized Clinical Trial

Male albumin solution hypotension on-pump cardiac surgery Cardiopulmonary Bypass hemodynamic treatment major adverse event Surgery, anesthesiology, intensive care, radiology Hemodynamics Middle Aged hyperlactatemia Postoperative Complications Double-Blind Method Albumins Ringer's acetate Humans Hyperlactatemia Female Cardiac Surgical Procedures Isotonic Solutions Hypotension Aged
DOI: 10.1053/j.jvca.2024.07.025 Publication Date: 2024-07-20T01:07:04Z
ABSTRACT
Compare hemodynamics between 4% albumin and Ringer's acetate.Exploratory analysis of the double-blind randomized ALBumin In Cardiac Surgery trial.Single-center study in Helsinki University Hospital.We included 1,386 on-pump cardiac surgical patients.We used 4% albumin or Ringer's acetate administration for cardiopulmonary bypass priming, volume replacement intraoperatively and 24 hours postoperatively.Hypotension (time-weighted average mean arterial pressure of <65 mmHg) and hyperlactatemia (time-weighted average blood lactate of >2 mmol/L) incidences were compared between trial groups in the operating room (OR), and early (0-6 hours) and late (6-24 hours) postoperatively. Associations of hypotension and hyperlactatemia with the ALBumin In Cardiac Surgery primary outcome (≥1 major adverse event [MAE]) were studied. In these time intervals, hypotension occurred in 118, 48, and 17 patients, and hyperlactatemia in 313, 131, and 83 patients. Hypotension and hyperlactatemia associated with MAE occurrence. Hypotension did not differ between the groups (albumin vs Ringer's: OR, 8.8% vs 8.5%; early postoperatively, 2.7% vs 4.2%; late postoperatively, 1.2% vs 1.3%; all p > 0.05). In the albumin group, hyperlactatemia was less frequent late postoperatively (2.9% vs 9.1%; p < 0.001), but not earlier (OR, 22.4% vs 23.6%; early postoperatively, 7.9% vs 11.0%; both p > 0.025 after Bonferroni-Holm correction).In on-pump cardiac surgery, hypotension and hyperlactatemia are associated with the occurrence of ≥1 MAE. Compared with Ringer's acetate, albumin did not decrease hypotension and decreased hyperlactatemia only late postoperatively. Albumin's modest hemodynamic effect is concordant with the finding of no difference in MAEs between albumin and Ringer's acetate in the ALBumin In Cardiac Surgery trial.
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