Erschienen in:
11.10.2017 | Original Article
Reduction of Cardiopulmonary/Renal Complications with Serum BNP-Guided Volume Status Management in Posthepatectomy Patients
verfasst von:
Sameer H. Patel, Bradford J. Kim, Ching-Wei D. Tzeng, Yun Shin Chun, Claudius Conrad, Jean-Nicolas Vauthey, Thomas A. Aloia
Erschienen in:
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery
|
Ausgabe 3/2018
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Abstract
Background
After hepatectomy, over- and under-resuscitations induce cardiopulmonary complications and acute kidney injury, respectively, leading to significant perioperative morbidity and mortality. Unlike serum chemistries or urine output, serum brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) levels have been shown to accurately reflect current intravascular fluid balance without influence from alterations of hormonal axes. Based on these data, this study was designed to measure the impact of a serum BNP-guided hepatobiliary fluid protocol on the incidence of posthepatectomy cardiopulmonary/renal complications.
Methods
Hepatectomy patients registered in a single-institution American College of Surgeons-National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database between 2011 and 2016 were examined in real time for the development of cardiopulmonary/renal complications and divided into pre- (2011–2013) and postimplementation (2014–2016) of a BNP-guided hepatobiliary fluid protocol groups. In the postimplementation group, maintenance fluids were tapered on a set protocol. Bolus fluids, diuresis, and micro-adjustments in fluid rate were guided by daily BNP values.
Results
Four hundred sixty patients underwent hepatectomy in the study period with 251 patients in the pre- and 209 patients in the postprotocol implementation groups. Cardiopulmonary/renal complication rates were 4.0% in the preprotocol group and reduced to 0.9% after initiation of the BNP-guided hepatobiliary fluid protocol (p = 0.04).
Conclusions
Despite low event rates, these data suggest that goal-directed postoperative fluid therapy with the combination of a hepatobiliary fluid protocol and serum BNP-guided volume management is superior to traditional chemistry and bedside volume assessment and can reduce posthepatectomy cardiopulmonary and renal complications.