Abstract
Prophylactic use of hypervolemia and hypertension is believed to present an option to decrease the incidence of symptomatic vasospasm after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage and improve neurologic outcome. A Medline literature search was conducted to review available evidence regarding volume management after subarachnoid hemorrhage. Quality of selected studies was evaluated, using the standardized GRADE system. Eleven studies focused on prophylactic hypervolemic therapy after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage were identified, including four randomized controlled trials. Available studies showed a large heterogeneity in physiologic treatment goals and interventions applied. The oldest and smallest randomized controlled trial suggested a positive effect, but had severe limitations in trial design. Neither of the other randomized controlled studies showed outcome benefit with hypervolemic therapy. Results from observational studies were not found to support the use of prophylactic hypervolemia and hypertension. Complication frequency was repeatedly reported to be higher with the application of prophylactic hypervolemia. In summary, prophylactic hyperdynamic therapy after subarachnoid hemorrhage has not been adequately shown to effectively raise cerebral blood flow or improve neurological outcome. In contrast, there is evidence for harm using overly aggressive hydration.
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Introduction
Hypertensive hypervolemic hemodilution (HHH) therapy is widely used for treating patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) [1]. Observational studies have supported benefit from prophylactic HHH to raise cerebral blood flow in patients after aneurysmal SAH and improve neurological outcome [2–4]. Therefore, prophylactic use of hypervolemia and hypertension has been hypothesized to present an option to decrease the occurrence and severity of symptomatic vasospasm, thus limiting the incidence of permanent delayed ischemic neurologic deficit and death after aneurysmal SAH.
A systematic review of HHH after SAH as preventive therapy for delayed ischemic neurological deficits published in 2003 identified a paucity of information, important limitations in the design of the few trails available, and inconsistencies among their applied endpoints [5]. A formal recommendation on the applicability of prophylactic HHH therapy was not given. Purpose of the current paper is a reevaluation of the currently available evidence for prophylactic use of hypervolemia and blood pressure augmentation, including the literature since July 2001, the end of inclusion in the previously published systematic review [5].
Methods
A pragmatic search of MEDLINE was conducted to find additional trials not considered in the previously published systematic review [5]. The search terms used were a subset of the ones used in the systematic review: “subarachnoid hemorrhage,” “aneurysm,” “delayed cerebral ischemia,” “neurologic deficit,” “cerebral vasospasm,” “hypertension,” “hyperdynamic,” “hypervolemic,” and “hemodilution.” English-language studies published between through October 2010 were included. References from identified review papers were screened to identify additional appropriate papers that had not been recognized in the MEDLINE search. The evidence of each original study was judged using the GRADE system [6].
Summary of the Literature
Eleven original studies dealing with prophylactic hypervolemic therapy after aneurysmal SAH were identified: four randomized controlled trials (RCTs), two prospective interventional trials, and five observational series using historic controls (Table 1) [2–4, 7–14]. Together, the RCTs included 244 patients; data from another 531 patients were investigated in the remaining studies.
Data description in the studies found did not allow sufficient discrimination of the individual components of HHH therapy. Therefore, a separate discussion of the different components of HHH therapy was deemed not to be useful. This limitation reflects a similar experience in clinical practice where additional volume loading leads to varying amounts of hemodilution, as well as increased cardiac performance and higher blood pressure.
Randomized Trials
The first trial on the prophylaxis of vasospasm after SAH was performed almost three decades ago. Rosenwasser and colleagues [7] investigated 30 patients after aneurysmal SAH grade I to IV on the Hunt-Hess scale, divided randomly in two groups. The treatment group received a pulmonary artery catheter and volume loading with albumin up to a pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP) of 12–15 mm Hg; this group also received a complex medication regimen, including hydralazine, methyldopa, propranolol, and nitroprusside to keep the systolic blood pressure below 120 mm Hg. The control group was treated with daily diuretics in a not specified manner. Surgical aneurysm treatment was performed after the acute phase, the standard of care at the time of the study. Primary endpoints were angiographic vasospasm and “survival to operation.” The treatment group had a higher survival to the operation (87% vs. 57%), a lower incidence of clinical vasospasm (20% vs. 60%), and an equivalent frequency of angiographic vasospasm (80% vs. 87%) compared with controls. Due to the complex manner of the intervention, it remains uncertain which treatment component contributed to the clinical results. It is possible that using diuretics in the control arm, but not the intervention arm, may have caused hypovolemia, which might have harmed the control group. In contrast to other studies included in this review, this is the only study actively decreasing systolic blood pressure. Furthermore, the randomization scheme was not disclosed, and the study was underpowered to detect a major effect on outcome. From a contemporary perspective, the study shows severe limitations in design, reporting quality and consistency, while the outcome assessment is not applicable with today’s current practice of early aneurysm securement.
Lennihan et al. [11] investigated 84 patients of all clinical SAH grades. Randomization was stratified in two groups according to the postoperative Hunt-Hess grade and the days of treatment initiation after SAH. The treatment group received volume loading with albumin to a pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP) > 14 mm Hg, the normovolemic group to a PCWP > 7 mm Hg. Outcome was assessed with Xenon computed tomography (CT) every third day in the initial phase after SAH and the Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) at 3 months. Physiologic endpoints and higher fluid intake were reached in the treatment group, but cerebral blood flow (CBF) assessed by Xenon CT did not differ between groups. Furthermore, incidence of symptomatic vasospasm and GOS score at 3 months did not differ between groups. Treatment complications were equally distributed between groups. Despite the higher fluid intake, reflected by a higher central venous pressure (CVP), the daily fluid balance of the patients was equal in both groups. Therefore, it remains questionable whether a true and sustained intravascular hypervolemia was achieved in the treatment group. Altogether, the study was well crafted, but did not report SAH severity according to the amount of blood in the admission CT scan and included only a few clinical high-grade SAH patients in each group, which may limit its generalizability.
In 2003, Egge and colleagues [12] reported data for 42 patients with aneurysmal SAH, randomized after stratifying according to the amount of blood measured by the Fisher scale. The standard treatment aimed for a neutral fluid balance using dextrose and 0.9% saline. The treatment group additionally received albumin and rheomacrodex targeting CVP between 8 and 12 mm H2O. Additionally, the mean arterial pressure (MAP) was elevated with dopamine 20 mm Hg above baseline. Evaluated physiologic parameters showed a good differentiation between both groups. Mean arterial pressure, fluid intake, and CVP values differed, as expected. However, there was no difference in outcome, measured either with transcranial Doppler (TCD), single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), GOS at 12 months, or extensive neuropsychological testing. Although the study was underpowered for detecting outcome differences, the treatment group did experience significantly more complications, as well as higher costs. As the study investigated a combined intervention with volume loading as well as MAP elevation, potential benefits from hypervolemia might be masked by problems with hypertension and vice versa. However, with a multitude of outcome parameters, the presented data are consistent and the results seem direct and applicable.
Mutoh and colleagues [14] investigated the use of a new hemodynamic monitoring device using transpulmonary thermodilution for evaluation of cardiac performance and volume status. One hundred patients were randomized equally to the new device or a control group using conventional CVP monitoring. A pulmonary artery catheter was used for control patients developing vasospasm. Volume therapy in the treatment group was guided by aiming for a global end-diastolic volume (GEDV) of 680–800 ml/m2 and a cardiac index of >3 l/kg/m2 achieved by 500–1,500 ml hydroxyethyl starch daily. The control group received crystalloid solutions to achieve a CVP of 5–8 mm Hg. Additional volume loading using albumin and catecholamine treatment with dobutamine started in both groups after diagnosis of rising TCD values or symptomatic vasospasm. In contrast to the intervention group, patients in the control group required more fluid replacement and showed a positive net fluid balance. Outcome assessed by the modified Rankin score 3 months after hemorrhage showed a positive trend (P = 0.06) for patients monitored with transpulmonary thermodilution, with significant lower incidences of TCD vasospasm, angiographic vasospasm, and clinical delayed ischemic neurologic deficit (P = 0.03, 0.05, and 0.03, respectively). Furthermore, the patients in the treatment arm showed significantly fewer complications (P = 0.01). This study is the largest investigation of prophylactic fluid management after aneurysmal SAH to date. As it was designed to investigate a new monitoring tool, the finding that more conservative fluid management was superior may represent a chance finding. Trends of GEDV and CVP as the main fluid status parameters as well as daily numbers of patients diagnosed with vasospasm in each group were not reported in the study. Therefore, it is difficult to assess whether differences in fluid management triggered vasospasm incidence or vice versa. Additionally, the disparity of main fluid infusions in the both groups, crystalloids or colloids, may have had an important impact on outcome. Recently, a dependence of GEDV on patient age and gender has been described [15], raising concern about the generalizability of these results.
Observational Studies
Available evidence for the use of prophylactic hyperdynamic therapy added from non-randomized controlled trials is limited. An observational series on 47 patients with SAH from the pre-nimodipine treatment era investigated a protocol of liberal fluid loading with a mixture of cristalloids and colloids up to a PCWP of 14–16 mm Hg [10]. Cardiac output was measured to determine the optimum PCWP and cardiac filling, without further specification of how to achieve these goals. The study did not demonstrate a reduction in morbidity or mortality compared with historical controls. What was reported, however, was an increase in the complication rate, predominantly pulmonary edema. Other work compared the use of hypervolemic therapy against a thromboxane A2 synthetase inhibitor in an unblinded, nonrandomized fashion in 28 patients, some of whom were also being treated with cisternal cerebrospinal fluid drainage [4]. Definite conclusions from this design are impossible. In another study, blood pressure elevation to an unspecified target with dopamine did not lead to a difference in cerebral blood flow monitored by serially performed Xenon CT investigations in 20 patients with and without symptomatic vasospasm [9]. Further work compared data from the literature against a management protocol including routine blood pressure elevation, albumin infusion and phlebotomization, mannitol, and dexamethasone used in 43 patients after SAH [3]. However, the complexity of the treatment investigated and selected historic controls limit definite conclusions. The largest observational series so far evaluated 172 patients with a liberal fluid intake and a medication regimen using nimodipine, fludrocortisone, and tranexamic acid [2]. This treatment was compared with that for 178 historical control patients treated under a restrictive fluid regimen including diuretics. Hyperdynamic therapy was initiated only when cerebral ischemia occurred. The authors noticed improvement in outcome that they credited to the change of medical treatment strategy. From the data of these observational studies, effects definitively attributable to hyperdynamic therapy are uncertain due to designs with concomitant treatments, surrogate endpoints, and the use of historic controls.
The effect of volume loading with 500 ml 5% serum albumin was investigated in 35 patients using Xenon-133 CT applied repeatedly in the first 4 weeks after aneurysmal SAH [8]. Results of this study suggested that increasing intravascular volume does not increase CBF nor reverse symptomatic vasospasm. According to a small, but nicely crafted prospective physiological intervention study, if a therapeutic effect of prophylactic hyperdynamic therapy is present at all, it seems to be attributable to induced hypertension rather than hypervolemia [13]. This study, however, did not investigate sustained effects, including any impact of hyperdynamic therapy on outcome. These findings were corroborated from a recent meta-analysis, concluding that there is no good evidence for a positive effect of HHH therapy or its single components on cerebral blood flow in patients with SAH [16].
Weighing the Evidence
Across all trials, there was heterogeneity regarding how to measure and evaluate volume status. Despite the frequent use of filling pressures, in particular the CVP, there is no consensus on the validity of this approach nor on the target values [17]. Newly established volume parameters like the GEDV derived by transpulmonary thermodilution may present a more valid option, but concern has been raised on the use of fixed target values [15].
Available data add support to the hypothesis that hypovolemia should be avoided after aneurysmal SAH, especially in the presence of vasopressors [18]. Routine use of diuretics, which was reported for the control groups in two studies, may worsen patient outcome [2, 7]. However, it remains yet to be proven that infusion therapy beyond adequate filling necessary for circulatory performance leads to sustained intravasal hypervolemia without detrimental fluid accumulation in the interstitial space.
All four randomized controlled trials were severely underpowered for detection of even moderate treatment effects on outcome. Conservatively estimated, more than 5,000 patients may be necessary in SAH trials for adequate outcome assessment of vasospasm treatment [19]. Therefore, the frequent occurrence of an increased complication rate with a too liberal fluid management of prophylactic hyperdynamic therapy adds additional concern that treatment risks likely outweigh potentially unrecognized benefits.
Conclusion
In summary, there is insufficient evidence for the effectiveness of prophylactic hyperdynamic therapy after SAH. Available studies fail to support benefit through increase in cerebral blood flow or improvement of neurological outcome. In contrast, there is evidence for harm using overly aggressive hydration.
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The Participants in the International Multi-disciplinary Consensus Conference: Michael N. Diringer, Thomas P. Bleck, Nicolas Bruder, E. Sander Connolly, Jr., Giuseppe Citerio, Daryl Gress, Daniel Hänggi, J. Claude Hemphill, III, Brian Hoh, Giuseppe Lanzino, Peter Le Roux, David Menon, Alejandro Rabinstein, Erich Schmutzhard, Lori Shutter, Nino Stocchetti, Jose Suarez, Miriam Treggiari, Ming-Yuan Tseng, Mervyn Vergouwen, Paul Vespa, Stefan Wolf, Gregory J. Zipfel.
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Wolf, S., The Participants in the International Multi-disciplinary Consensus Conference on the Critical Care Management of Subarachnoid Hemorrhage. Routine Management of Volume Status After Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage. Neurocrit Care 15, 275–280 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12028-011-9593-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12028-011-9593-9