RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Care guided by tissue oxygenation and haemodynamic monitoring in off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting (Bottomline-CS): assessor blind, single centre, randomised controlled trial JF BMJ JO BMJ FD British Medical Journal Publishing Group SP e082104 DO 10.1136/bmj-2024-082104 VO 388 A1 Han, Jiange A1 Zhai, Wenqian A1 Wu, Zhenhua A1 Zhang, Zhao A1 Wang, Tao A1 Ren, Min A1 Liu, Ziyue A1 Sessler, Daniel I A1 Guo, Zhigang A1 Meng, Lingzhong A1 the Bottomline-CS investigation group YR 2025 UL https://www.bmj.com/content/388/bmj-2024-082104.abstract AB Objective To assess whether perioperative management guided by near-infrared spectroscopy to determine tissue oxygen saturation and haemodynamic monitoring reduces postoperative complications after off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting. Design Assessor blinded, single centre, randomised controlled trial (Bottomline-CS trial). Setting A tertiary teaching hospital in China. Participants 1960 patients aged 60 years or older who were scheduled for elective off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting. Interventions All patients had multisite monitoring of tissue oxygen saturation (bilateral forehead and unilateral forearm brachioradialis) and haemodynamic monitoring. Both groups received usual care, including arterial blood pressure, central venous pressure, electrocardiography, and transoesophageal echocardiography when indicated. Guided care aimed to maintain tissue oxygenation within 10% above or below preoperative baseline values, established 24-48 hours before surgery, from the start of anaesthesia until extubation or for up to 24 hours postoperatively. In the usual care group, tissue oximetry and haemodynamic data were concealed, and care was routine. Main outcome measures The primary outcome was the incidence of a composite of 30 day postoperative complications, which were cerebral, cardiac, respiratory, renal, infectious, and mortality complications. Secondary outcomes included the individual components of the composite outcome, new-onset atrial fibrillation, and hospital length of stay. Results Of 1960 patients randomly assigned, data from 967 guided care and 974 usual care patients were analysed. During anaesthesia, the area under the curve for tissue oxygen saturation measurements outside the plus and minus 10% baseline range was significantly smaller with guided care than only usual care: left forehead 32.4 versus 57.6 (%×min, P<0.001), right forehead 37.9 versus 62.6 (P<0.001), and forearm 14.8 versus 44.7 (P<0.001). The primary composite outcome occurred in 457/967 (47.3%) patients in the guided care group and 466/974 (47.8%) patients in the usual care group (unadjusted risk ratio 0.99 (95% confidence interval 0.90 to 1.08), P=0.83). No secondary outcomes differed significantly between groups. The largest observed difference was in incidence of pneumonia, which was less frequent in the guided care group (88/967, 9.1%) than in the usual care group (121/974, 12.4%) and not statistically significant after adjusting for multiple comparisons. Conclusions Guided care by use of multisite near-infrared spectroscopy and haemodynamic monitoring effectively maintained tissue oxygenation near baseline levels compared with usual care. However, no clear evidence was noted that this approach reduced the incidence of major postoperative complications. These findings do not support the routine use of near-infrared spectroscopy and haemodynamic monitoring to maintain tissue oxygenation during off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04896736. The code used to analyse the data in the paper can be found in the supplemental files. The data underlying the findings in this paper are openly and publicly available and can be found here: (DOI: 10.5061/dryad.z34tmpgqz). If you encounter problems accessing the data, please contact the corresponding author.