异丙酚
七氟醚
医学
谵妄
麻醉
发作性谵妄
全身麻醉
相对风险
置信区间
入射(几何)
临床终点
随机对照试验
外科
重症监护医学
内科学
物理
光学
作者
Shuang-Jie Cao,Yue Zhang,Yuxiu Zhang,Wei Zhao,Linghui Pan,Xude Sun,Zhenyu Jia,Wen Ouyang,Qing-Shan Ye,Fangxiang Zhang,Yongqing Guo,Yanqiu Ai,Bin-Jiang Zhao,Jian-Bo Yu,Zhiheng Liu,Ning Yin,Xueying Li,Jiahui Ma,Hui-Juan Li,Meirong Wang,Daniel I. Sessler,Daqing Ma,Dong‐Xin Wang
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.bja.2023.04.024
摘要
Delirium is a common and disturbing postoperative complication that might be ameliorated by propofol-based anaesthesia. We therefore tested the primary hypothesis that there is less delirium after propofol-based than after sevoflurane-based anaesthesia within 7 days of major cancer surgery.This multicentre randomised trial was conducted in 14 tertiary care hospitals in China. Patients aged 65-90 yr undergoing major cancer surgery were randomised to either propofol-based anaesthesia or to sevoflurane-based anaesthesia. The primary endpoint was the incidence of delirium within 7 postoperative days.A total of 1228 subjects were enrolled and randomised, with 1195 subjects included in the modified intention-to-treat analysis (mean age 71 yr; 422 [35%] women); one subject died before delirium assessment. Delirium occurred in 8.4% (50/597) of subjects given propofol-based anaesthesia vs 12.4% (74/597) of subjects given sevoflurane-based anaesthesia (relative risk 0.68 [95% confidence interval {CI}: 0.48-0.95]; P=0.023; adjusted relative risk 0.59 [95% CI: 0.39-0.90]; P=0.014). Delirium reduction mainly occurred on the first day after surgery, with a prevalence of 5.4% (32/597) with propofol anaesthesia vs 10.7% (64/597) with sevoflurane anaesthesia (relative risk 0.50 [95% CI: 0.33-0.75]; P=0.001). Secondary endpoints, including ICU admission, postoperative duration of hospitalisation, major complications within 30 days, cognitive function at 30 days and 3 yr, and safety outcomes, did not differ significantly between groups.Delirium was a third less common after propofol than sevoflurane anaesthesia in older patients having major cancer surgery. Clinicians might therefore reasonably select propofol-based anaesthesia in patients at high risk of postoperative delirium.Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (ChiCTR-IPR-15006209) and ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02662257).
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