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The Effect of Noradrenaline Infusion Versus Standard Blood Pressure Management on Perioperative HYPotension in NOn-caRdiac Surgery HYP-NOR Trial

The Effect of Noradrenaline Infusion Versus Standard Blood Pressure Management on Perioperative HYPotension in NOn-caRdiac Surgery HYP-NOR Trial

Recruiting
45 years and older
All
Phase 3

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Overview

The effect of noradrenaline infusion versus standard blood pressure management on perioperative HYPotension in NOn-caRdiac surgery.

The study aims to determine whether perioperative noradrenaline infusion is superior to standard blood pressure management for the occurrence of perioperative hypotension.

Description

Patients will receive either noradrenaline infusion or standard blood pressure management during and up to 4 hours after surgery. Patients and health care providers will not be blinded to patients' allocation to either arm of the trial. Continuous blood pressure measurements will be secured in all patients who do not have an arterial line already in place for other indications using a non-invasive volume-clamp method. The medical team will not be aware of the continuous blood pressure monitoring and will use solely non-invasive blood pressure measurements at time intervals (at least every 5 minutes). In each group, patients will receive balanced crystalloids at 4 ml/kg per hour as maintenance fluid during surgery. In mechanical ventilation, a tidal volume of 8 mL/kg predicted body weight will be recommended. Other ventilatory settings, optimisation of volume status, depth of anaesthesia, patient positioning, as well as prompt diagnosis and treatment of reversible causes of hypotension will be prioritised in all patients in adherence with institutional protocols and current standards of practice.

The study aims to determine whether perioperative noradrenaline infusion can reduce exposure to hypotension compared to reactive treatment of hypotension, whether it is more effective in controlling hypotension during the intraoperatively and postoperatively, whether it reduces the risk of postoperative organ dysfunction, and whether it is safe and does not increase the risk of potential complications.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. ≥45 years old
  2. Elective or accelerated* non-cardiac surgery expected to last ≥1 hour and requiring general, neuraxial, or combined general with neuraxial anesthesia
  3. Expected to stay overnight in the hospital after surgery
  4. Written informed consent to participate in the HYP-NOR Trial provided
  5. American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status class II or higher.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Newly diagnosed, untreated, or uncontrolled hypertension -in two measurements on the day before surgery Systolic Blood Pressure (SBP) ≥180 mm Hg or Diastolic Blood Pressure (DBP) ≥110 mm Hg
  2. Persistent difference in recorded SBP between right and left upper limb >10 mm Hg
  3. Persistent atrial fibrillation
  4. Have a documented history of dementia
  5. Have language, vision, or hearing impairments that may compromise cognitive assessments
  6. Have a condition that precludes routine blood pressure management such as surgeon request for relative hypotension
  7. Receiving irreversible nonselective monoamine oxidase inhibitors (e.g. tranylcypromine, phenelzine) within 2 weeks preceding study enrolment
  8. The use of tricyclic antidepressants
  9. Have Prinzmetal angina
  10. Have contraindications to noradrenaline per clinician judgement
  11. Noradrenaline infusion started before surgery or plan to use continuous noradrenaline infusion throughout the procedure
  12. Treating physician (surgeon/anaesthetist) decides on the necessity of extended continuous hemodynamic monitoring during or after surgery
  13. Severe kidney disease (MDRD creatinine clearance <15 mL/min/1.73m2) or renal replacement therapy
  14. End-stage heart failure: defined as NYHA Class IV - severe limitations in daily activity. Patients experience symptoms even while at rest. Mostly bedbound patients.
  15. Known severe liver disease: defined as the presence of liver cirrhosis or any of the symptoms of severe liver dysfunction: portal hypertension (esophageal varices, ascites), hepatocellular insufficiency (e.g., jaundice, hepatic encephalopathy) and coagulopathy (prolonged INR/APTT associated with known liver dysfunction).
  16. Emergency and urgent surgery defined as performed within 24 hours of sudden illness/unplanned admission to hospital
  17. Have previously participated in the trial: patient already took a part in the HYP-NOR trial in the past
  18. Pregnant or breastfeeding women.

Study details
    Hypotension
    Non-cardiac Surgery

NCT06885268

Jagiellonian University

15 October 2025

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