Neurodevelopmental outcome at 5 years of age after general anaesthesia or awake-regional anaesthesia in infancy (GAS): an international, multicentre, randomised, controlled equivalence trial
GAS Consortium. The Lancet. February 2019:664-677. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(18)32485-1
Content
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Preclinical data suggest that general anaesthetics affect brain development. There is mixed evidence from cohort studies that young children exposed to anaesthesia can have an increased risk of poor neurodevelopmental outcome. We aimed to establish whether general anaesthesia in infancy has any effect on neurodevelopmental outcome. Here we report the secondary outcome of neurodevelopmental outcome at 2 years of age in the General Anaesthesia compared to Spinal anaesthesia (GAS) trial.
METHODS:
In this international assessor-masked randomised controlled equivalence trial, we recruited infants younger than 60 weeks postmenstrual age, born at greater than 26 weeks’ gestation, and who had inguinal herniorrhaphy, from 28 hospitals in Australia, Italy, the USA, the UK, Canada, the Netherlands, and New Zealand. Infants were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either awake-regional anaesthesia or sevoflurane-based general anaesthesia. Web-based randomisation was done in blocks of two or four and stratified by site and gestational age at birth. Infants were excluded if they had existing risk factors for neurological injury. The primary outcome of the trial will be the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence Third Edition (WPPSI-III) Full Scale Intelligence Quotient score at age 5 years. The secondary outcome, reported here, is the composite cognitive score of the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development III, assessed at 2 years. The analysis was as per protocol adjusted for gestational age at birth. A difference in means of five points (1/3 SD) was predefined as the clinical equivalence margin. This trial is registered with ANZCTR, number ACTRN12606000441516 and ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00756600.
FINDINGS:
Between Feb 9, 2007, and Jan 31, 2013, 363 infants were randomly assigned to receive awake-regional anaesthesia and 359 to general anaesthesia. Outcome data were available for 238 children in the awake-regional group and 294 in the general anaesthesia group. In the as-per-protocol analysis, the cognitive composite score (mean [SD]) was 98.6 (14.2) in the awake-regional group and 98.2 (14.7) in the general anaesthesia group. There was equivalence in mean between groups (awake-regional minus general anaesthesia 0.169, 95% CI -2.30 to 2.64). The median duration of anaesthesia in the general anaesthesia group was 54 min.
INTERPRETATION:
For this secondary outcome, we found no evidence that just less than 1 h of sevoflurane anaesthesia in infancy increases the risk of adverse neurodevelopmental outcome at 2 years of age compared with awake-regional anaesthesia.
FUNDING:
Australia National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), Health Technologies Assessment-National Institute for Health Research UK, National Institutes of Health, Food and Drug Administration, Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists, Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, Canadian Institute of Health Research, Canadian Anesthesiologists’ Society, Pfizer Canada, Italian Ministry of Heath, Fonds NutsOhra, and UK Clinical Research Network (UKCRN).
Klinische vraag
- Heeft de keuze van de anesthesietechniek (algehele t.o.v. regionale anesthesie) invloed op de neurologische ontwikkeling van kinderen op de leeftijd van 5 jaar (primair eindpunt1) en 2 jaar (secondaire eindpunt2)?
Samenvatting
- Multicenter, multinationale randomised controlled trial
- 722 kinderen in 7 landen en 28 centra voor geplande uni- of bilaterale hernia inguinalis chirurgie (evt. i.c.m. circumcisie)
- 359 kinderen onder algehele anesthesie
- 363 kinderen onder regionale anesthesie
- Alleen kinderen met een postconceptionele leeftijd van maximaal 60 weken
- Geen (ex-)prematuren onder 26 weken
- Anesthesietechniek:
- Algeheel: sevofluraan voor inductie en onderhoud (max. tot 8% inspiratoir) evt. i.c.m. caudale anesthesie
- Regionaal: maximaal 2.5 mg/kg bupivacaine (caudaal of spinaal of spinaal i.c.m. caudaal of ilioinguinaal)
Key message
- Algehele anesthesie in de vroege kinderjaren heeft geen invloed op de neurologische ontwikkeling van kinderen op 2 en 5 jarige leeftijd
Sterke punten
- Breed opgezette, naar de onderzoekers geblindeerde trial
- Lange follow-up
Limitaties
- Hernia inguinalis chirurgie is een relatief korte ingreep (gemiddeld 54 minuten in de algehele anesthesie groep)
- Significant meer jongens door geslachtsgerelateerde incidentieverschillen van een hernia inguinalis
- Op de onderzochte leeftijden van 2 en 5 jaar vindt er nog steeds veel neurologisch ontwikkeling plaats. Derhalve worden latere effecten mogelijk niet waargenomen in deze trial
Relevantie
- Eerste trial over vergelijking van algehele en regionale anesthesie bij kleine kinderen
- Algehele anesthesie gedurende 1 uur als klein kind heeft geen invloed op de neurologische ontwikkeling op de leeftijd van 5 jaar in vergelijking met wakker-regionale anesthesie
- Studiepopulatie is overwegend mannelijk
- Een langere anesthesieduur dan 1 uur is niet onderzocht
Externe links
Referenties
- 1.McCann ME, de Graaff JC, Dorris L, et al. Neurodevelopmental outcome at 5 years of age after general anaesthesia or awake-regional anaesthesia in infancy (GAS): an international, multicentre, randomised, controlled equivalence trial. The Lancet. February 2019:664-677. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(18)32485-1
- 2.Davidson AJ, Disma N, de Graaff JC, et al. Neurodevelopmental outcome at 2 years of age after general anaesthesia and awake-regional anaesthesia in infancy (GAS): an international multicentre, randomised controlled trial. The Lancet. January 2016:239-250. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(15)00608-x