Objective: To evaluate the efficacy, safety, and cost-effectiveness of a perioperative magnesium (Mg) sulfate protocol in reducing postoperative atrial fibrillation (AF) incidence and ICU resource strain following cardiac surgery.
Methods: Design: Double-blind, single-center randomized controlled trial (RCT). Setting: Tertiary-care academic hospital. Participants: 130 adults undergoing elective cardiac surgery, randomized to Mg sulfate (n=65) or placebo (n=65). Interventions: The Mg group received a pharmacokinetic-guided regimen: 2 g intravenous bolus post-cardiopulmonary bypass, followed by 1 g/h infusion for 5 hours, then 200 mg/h for 19 hours, and oral supplementation (I g every 8 hours) for one week post-discharge. The placebo group received equivalent saline infusions and oral placebo.
Results: Primary outcome: AF incidence was 18.5% in the Mg group vs. 41.5% in placebo (unadjusted RR=0.45, 95% CI: 0.25–0.81; p=0.007). Secondary outcomes: Mg shortened ICU stay by 1.4 days (p<0.001), reduced mechanical ventilation duration by 3.2 hours (p<0.001), and demonstrated comparable safety profiles for hypotension and renal impairment. Subgroup analysis: CABG patients showed 65% risk reduction (OR=0.35, p=0.01). Cost-effectiveness: ICU stay reduction projected $3,500 savings per patient.
Conclusions: Perioperative Mg sulfate significantly reduces AF incidence, accelerates recovery, and lowers healthcare costs, supporting its integration into standardized postoperative protocols. This trial provides Level I evidence for Mg as a guideline-recommended intervention. These findings are promising and support the integration of Mg into standardized postoperative protocols; however, they require confirmation in larger, multicenter studies.
Pharmacokinetic-guided magnesium prophylaxis in cardiac surgery: A randomized trial demonstrating guideline-level reductions in atrial fibrillation, accelerated recovery, and systemic cost savings
DOI: 10.2478/jccm-2026-0001
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