Goal-directed perfusion in children undergoing heart surgery

Theme Surgical and orthopaedic innovation

Workstream Interventions to improve patient outcomes after surgery

Status: This project is ongoing

Blood carries oxygen and nutrients around the body. It also removes waste products from tissues and organs. This process is called perfusion.

Cardiopulmonary bypass or a heart-lung machine is a machine that temporarily takes over the function of the heart and lungs during open-heart surgery. It ensures that blood circulates around the body so it can deliver oxygen and remove waste as needed.

Goal-directed perfusion (GDP) during cardiopulmonary bypass aims to balance the oxygen supply and demand of a patient while they are undergoing surgery. Optimising oxygen delivery is a key objective of GDP. This approach protects vital organs, reduces the risk of acute kidney injury, and decreases overall hospital stays.

Perfusion management is an important factor determining both short- and long-term outcomes in children undergoing heart surgery. However, its use in children:

  • Is inconsistently defined
  • Lacks a well-established evidence base
  • Lacks consistent and well-described practice

Project aims

This project will lay the groundwork for a national programme of research on GDP in paediatric heart surgery by:

  • Defining its core components
  • Identifying key physiological markers and heart-lung machine parameters
  • Creating a standardised data structure

What we hope to achieve

We hope to produce an evidence-based map of physiological markers and target ranges, corresponding machine parameters, associated outcomes and an evidence gap map for GDP in paediatric heart surgery.