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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07523334

Impact of Esketamine on Delayed Neurocognitive Recovery in Older Patients

Impact of Esketamine on Delayed Neurocognitive Recovery in Older Patients Undergoing Non-cardiac Surgery: a Two-center, Dose-exploring Pilot Trial

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
120 (estimated)
Sponsor
Peking University First Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
65 Years – 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Esketamine is frequently used during the perioperative period for supplemental analgesia. Small sample size trials showed that subanesthetic dose esketamine may decrease postoperative neurocognitive complications. However, conflicting results exist and optimal dose of esketamine remains to be determined. This dose-exploring pilot trial is designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of three different perioperative esketamine dosing regimens in older patients undergoing major non-cardiac surgery. The primary purpose is to explore the optimal dosing strategy that produce maximal neurocognitive benefits with minimal adverse neuropsychiatric symptoms.

Detailed description

Postoperative neurocognitive complications including delirium and delayed neurocognitive recovery are common in older patients after major surgery and associated with worse early and long-term outcomes. Risk factors of neurocognitive complications are multiple. Predisposing factors include older age, low education, and cognitive decline. Precipitating factors include major surgery, high dose opioids, severe pain, and sleep disturbances. The underlying mechanisms are not totally clear but may include surgery-related stress response and inflammation. Ketamine is a noncompetitive N-Methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptor antagonist and has been used as an anesthetic and analgesic for decades. Esketamine is the S-enantiomer of ketamine and has an analgesic potent of approximately 2 times of that of ketamine. Available studies showed that subanesthetic dose ketamine/esketamine may reduce delirium and/or delayed neurocognitive recovery. However, conflicting results exist. Furthermore, even subanesthetic dose ketamine/esketamine may produce neuropsychiatric symptoms which are harmful for neurocognitive recovery. This dose-exploring pilot trial is designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of three different perioperative esketamine dosing regimens in older patients undergoing major non-cardiac surgery. The primary purpose is to explore the optimal dosing strategy that produce maximal neurocognitive benefits with minimal adverse neuropsychiatric symptoms.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGEsketamine 1During anesthesia, a loading dose esketamine (0.5 mg/ml) 0.4 ml/kg will be infused over 30 minutes (0.1 mg/kg) after anesthesia induction, followed by a continuous infusion at 0.1 ml/kg/h (0.05 mg/kg/h) until 1 hour before the expected end of surgery. After surgery, patient-controlled intravenous analgesia will be established with esketamine (0.25 mg/ml) and sufentanil (1 ug/ml), programmed to deliver 2-ml bolus (0.5 mg esketamine) with a 8-10-minute lock-out time and a 1-ml/h (0.25 mg/h esketamine) background infusion, and used for up to 48 hours.
DRUGEsketamine 2During anesthesia, a loading dose esketamine (1.0 mg/ml) 0.4 ml/kg will be infused over 30 minutes (0.2 mg/kg) after anesthesia induction, followed by a continuous infusion at 0.1 ml/kg/h (0.1 mg/kg/h) until 1 hour before the expected end of surgery. After surgery, patient-controlled intravenous analgesia will be established with esketamine (0.5 mg/ml) and sufentanil (1 ug/ml), programmed to deliver 2-ml bolus (1 mg esketamine) with a 8-10-minute lock-out time and a 1-ml/h (0.5 mg/h esketamine) background infusion, and used for up to 48 hours.
DRUGEsketamine 3During anesthesia, a loading dose esketamine (1.5 mg/ml) 0.4 ml/kg will be infused over 30 minutes (0.3 mg/kg) after anesthesia induction, followed by a continuous infusion at 0.1 ml/kg/h (0.15 mg/kg/h) until 1 hour before the expected end of surgery. After surgery, patient-controlled intravenous analgesia will be established with esketamine (0.75 mg/ml) and sufentanil (1 ug/ml), programmed to deliver 2-ml bolus (1.5 mg esketamine) with a 8-10-minute lock-out time and a 1-ml/h (0.75 mg/h esketamine) background infusion, and used for up to 48 hours.
DRUGNormal salineDuring anesthesia, a loading dose placebo (normal saline) 0.4 ml/kg will be infused over 30 minutes after anesthesia induction, followed by a continuous infusion at 0.1 ml/kg/h until 1 hour before the expected end of surgery. After surgery, patient-controlled intravenous analgesia will be established with sufentanil (1 ug/ml), programmed to deliver 2-ml bolus with a 8-10-minute lock-out time and a 1-ml/h background infusion, and used for up to 48 hours.

Timeline

Start date
2026-04-01
Primary completion
2026-12-01
Completion
2026-12-01
First posted
2026-04-13
Last updated
2026-04-14

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07523334. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.