Safety and efficacy of 6% hydroxyethyl starch in patients undergoing major surgery: The randomised controlled PHOENICS trial

  • Wolfgang Buhre
  • , Óscar Díaz-Cambronero
  • , Simon Schaefer
  • , Martin Novacek
  • , Marina Soro Domingo
  • , Bjorn Stessel
  • , Aurelio Rodríguez-Pérez
  • , Torsten Richter
  • , Georg Rohe
  • , Bernard Cholley
  • , Matthias Gruenewald
  • , Gerhardus Kuiper
  • , Samir Jaber
  • , Dianne de Korte
  • , Javier Belda
  • , Marcelo Gama de Abreu
  • , Robert Baronica
  • , Thomas Scheeren
  • , Carlos Ferrando-Ortolá
  • , Wojciech Szczeklik
  • Dana Tomescu, Tomas Vyzamal, Zejka Gavranovic, María Pilar Argente-Navarro, Guido Mazzinari, Sarah Thaler, Nuria García-Gregorio, Jeroen Vandenbrande, Diane Zlotnik, Jakob Wittenstein, Sonja Schmier, Susanne Rohn, Christoph Glasmacher, Martin Holler, Cornelius Jungheinrich, Ulf Niess, Daniel I. Sessler, Martin Westphal, María José Alberola, Cesar Aldecoa, Begoña Ayas Montero, Robert Baronica, Ángel Becerra-Bolaños, Helmar Bornemann-Cimenti, Emmanuel Boselli, Laura Bruno, Ina Callebaut, Jean Michel Constantin, Andres Cordula, Boris Cox, Audrey De Jong, Faustine Depays, Mareike Diekmann, Anja Diers, Dan Sebastian Dirzu, Gabriela Droc, Marysol Echeverri Velez, Younes El Amine, Mar Felipe, Philip Gabriel, Santiago García Del Valle, Laura García Vargas, Marc Garner, Ignacio Garutti, Laurien Geebelen, Anne Godier, Sebastian Goss, Ioana Grintescu, Philipp Groene, Thomas Grote, Elke Gunnar, Markus W. Hollmann, Radmilo Jankovic, María Victoria Johannessen, David Kahn, Thomas Kaufmann, Aghilas Kezar, Walter Klimscha, Anna Kluzik, Sonja Krofak, Łukasz Krzych, Bartosz Kudlinski, Jihane Lamrani, Sigismond Lasocki, Gilles Lebuffe, Stefan Lennartz, Pawel Lewandowski, Clara Marchesi, Nilda Martinez Castro, Maria Angeles Martin-Pacetti, Vratislav Matejka, Isabel Molina, Virginia Moreno, Connie Müller, Elena Muñoz-Forner, Lucie Novackova, Marc Ongenae, Niels Ostmeier, Radoslaw Owczuk, Tatiana Sarmiento-Trujillo, Martin Scharffenberg, Patrick Scheiermann, Nasara Segura Marín, Negoita Silvius Ioan, Valérie Smit-Fun, Jens Soukup, Nicole Trebesius, Héctor Trujillo-Morales, Tomas Tyll, Marta Ubré Lorenzo, Lucía Valencia-Sola, Sandra Verdeguer, Franck Verdonk, María Vila Montañes, Benjamin Vojnar, Frank Wappler, Thomas Weiss, Marek Welna, Maria Wittmann

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hydroxyethyl starch (HES) is often used for maintaining vascular volume during major surgery. Long-term high-dose HES in septic patients promotes renal injury, whereas meta-analyses of current HES products in surgical patients do not show such effects. OBJECTIVE: We studied if the peri-operative use of HES is noninferior to crystalloids in terms of acute kidney injury. Secondary outcome was the noninferiority of HES on worsening of renal injury and/or the incidence of a composite endpoint of major complications and mortality until postoperative day 90. DESIGN: Randomised double-blind trial in patients undergoing elective abdominal surgery with expected blood loss at least 500 ml. SETTING: Multicentre trial at 53 study sites in 10 European countries. PATIENTS: One thousand nine hundred and eighty-five (HES 977, crystalloid-only 981) patients aged 40 to 85 years with ASA status II-III. INTERVENTION: Either 6% HES 130/0.4 or a crystalloid solution. Dosing was guided by mean arterial pressure and/or routine haemodynamic variables. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Change from pre-operative to lowest cystatin C-based eGFR during the first 3 postoperative days. Key secondary outcome was a composite endpoint of mortality and major postoperative complications after 90 days. RESULTS: Mean change in eGFR from baseline to minimum was -3.4 ± 17.7 ml min -1  1.73 m -2 in HES patients and -1.0 ± 17.1 ml min -1 1.73 m -2 in crystalloid-only patients ( P  < 0.001 for noninferiority). The key secondary endpoint occurred in 35% of patients in each group. There were no clinically relevant differences in any safety endpoint including 90-day renal function. Any cause mortality-difference until the end of 1-year follow-up was not significantly different (8.6% in HES and 10.1% in crystalloid patients). CONCLUSION: Peri-operative use of HES was noninferior to crystalloids in short-term renal function or a composite of mortality and major complications at 90 days. PHOENICS provides robust evidence that peri-operative in-label use of HES is well tolerated. TRIAL REGISTRATION AND FUNDING: EudraCT no. 2016-002162-30, clinicaltrials.gov ID NCT03278548.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-10
Number of pages10
JournalEuropean Journal of Anaesthesiology
Volume43
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2026

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