Viewing Study NCT00214656



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Last Modification Date: 2024-10-26 @ 9:18 AM
Study NCT ID: NCT00214656
Status: UNKNOWN
Last Update Posted: 2005-09-22
First Post: 2005-09-14

Brief Title: Salvage Use of Recombinant Factor VIIa After Inadequate Haemostasis in Complex Cardiac Surgery
Sponsor: Austin Health
Organization: Austin Health

Study Overview

Official Title: Salvage Use of Recombinant Activated Factor VII After Inadequate Haemostatic Response to Conventional Therapy in Complex Cardiac Surgery - a Randomised Placebo Controlled Trial
Status: UNKNOWN
Status Verified Date: 2005-09
Last Known Status: RECRUITING
Delayed Posting: No
If Stopped, Why?: Not Stopped
Has Expanded Access: False
If Expanded Access, NCT#: N/A
Has Expanded Access, NCT# Status: N/A
Acronym: None
Brief Summary: Aims and Hypotheses

This randomised placebo controlled study will test the hypothesis that Recombinant Activated Factor VII rVIIa will improve haemostasis after an inadequate response to conventional therapy in complex cardiac surgery

Major bleeding is still of concern in complex cardiac surgery It has been shown to be associated with poorer patient outcome and results in the consumption of resources hospital costs manpower and blood bank reserves This study has the potential to provide evidence that rVIIa can reduce transfusion requirements and improve patient outcome in a problematic aspect of complicated cardiac surgery

The objective is to conduct a multi-centre randomised placebo controlled study that has been designed to scientifically evaluate the treatment of post bypass coagulopathy in the association with complex cardiac surgery The trial design is based on clinical practice that has evolved over 2 years at the Austin Hospital during which 38 patients have received open label administration of rVIIa There is currently no published RCT in this area and there is no TGA approval for the use of rVIIa for this indication
Detailed Description: 11 3 Methods

Synopsis of Study

A multicentred randomised double blind placebo-controlled trial evaluating the efficacy and safety of activated recombinant factor VII rVIIa in complex cardiac surgery

Study will be conducted at Austin Hospital Alfred Hospital and Warringal Private Hospital

The study will have two arms

1 Those who have inadequate haemostasis after initial standardised administration of coagulation factors and receive rVIIa Active arm
2 Those who have inadequate haemostasis after initial standardised administration of coagulation factors and receive placebo Placebo arm

We anticipate from our preliminary series that 50 of enrolled subjects will achieve haemostasis after the initial standardised dose of coagulation factors and therefore dont receive trial medication Identical data will be collected and will form an observational subgroup for analysis

The protocol allows for open label administration of rVIIa if adequate haemostasis is not achieved after two standardised administrations of coagulation factors and the trial medication This would be within 2 hours of the completion of the first administration

Primary endpoint will be adequate haemostasis to enable chest closure after administration of trial medication without the need for further intervention to improve coagulation

Secondary Endpoints percentage of cases that haemostasis after first administration of coagulation factors alone Assessment of surgical field after administration of trial medication Time to closure of chest after administration of trial medication Transfusion requirements in post bypass period in theatre Transfusion requirements in ICU first 12 hours Mediastinal drainage in ICU first 12 hours Coagulation study results at various sample times Requirement for chest re-exploration Ventilation duration in ICU Duration of stay in ICU

Inclusion Criteria

Patients with scheduled cardiac surgery undergoing the following procedures Double valve replacements or repair Major thoracic aortic surgery including hypothermic circulatory arrest or descending aortic reconstruction

Valve repair or replacement in the setting of endocarditis Complex procedures requiring cardiopulmonary bypass duration anticipated to exceed 180 minutes in patients aged ³70 years

Exclusion Criteria

Patient unable to give informed consent Patient refusal Allergy to rVIIa Allergy to aprotinin or prior exposure within 6 months Pre-existing congenital coagulopathy Pre-existing hypercoagulable state Patients in inclusion criteria whose actual bypass time does not exceed 180 minutes Unresolved surgical bleeding

Withdrawal from Trial

At the discretion of treating physicians if the proposed transfusion protocol post CPB is inadequate to keep up with blood loss a patient can be withdrawn from the trial Transfusion therapy according to current medical practice at the discretion of treating physicians will follow rVIIa as per current hospital guidelines will be available Data will still be collected in this group

Randomization Pharmacy will randomise patient after notified of entry into study Blinded packaged trial medication will be sent to theatre

Surgical management Surgical technique will be at the discretion of treating surgeon but techniques that may affect haemostasis eg Use of biologic glues etc will be recorded

Anaesthetic management Choice of anaesthetic agents will be at the discretion of treating anaesthetist

All patients will receive aprotinin 2 x 106 IV over 1 hour after test dose of 10000 units over 5 minutes and 2 x 106 IV in the CPB circuit prime 075 x 106 IV to infusion per hour

All patients will be haemofiltered on bypass

Core temperature monitoring on all patients Standard technique to preserve patient temperature Topical head cooling will be used if hypothermic circulatory arrest is needed

Cardiopulmonary bypass management

Standardised CPB prime and circuits Cell saver for all patients Cardiotomy return for all patients

Haemoglobin maintained between 6-8gmdL during bypass Aim for haemoglobin of 10gmdL at time of weaning from bypass Units of packed cells transfused on bypass will be recorded

Adequate rewarming core temp 35 for 20 minutes

Alpha stat pH management Acid-base pH 73-75 BE - 3 prior to weaning from bypass

Post bypass period

Transfusion and trial medication administration guidelines are found on Flow Chart

Red Cell Transfusion Trigger Aim for haemoglobin concentration between 80 and 100 gramslitre using either banked or washed red cells

The planned conventional therapy of aprotinin and an initial administration predominately platelets 10 units cryoprecipitate 3 mlskg high concentration of fibrinogen and a moderate dose of fresh frozen plasma 5mlkg is appropriate based on both our clinical experience and advice from the Australian Red Cross

If at anytime adherence to protocol at the discretion of treating medical staff is considered to place the patient at risk of inadequate transfusion the patient can be withdrawn and transfusion commenced as determined by medical staff Data will still be collected for these patients

The duration of protocol during transfusion is two hours Either adequate haemostasis will have been achieved by the interventions as indicated in the protocol or the scenario of inadequate haemostasis despite two administrations of standardising coagulation factor and trial medications followed by open label administration of rVIIa will have evolved If this is the case ongoing transfusion surgical and medical management will be at the discretion of medical staff Administration of rVIIa can be considered after discussion with trial investigators Data will still be collected for such patients

ICU Management Blood loss measurement in the closed drainage system must be documented at least once hourly or more frequently if blood loss is excessive The patient should be sat up in bed on arrival in ICU this will allow CXR to be taken before starting to measure drainage On arrival to ICU coagulation studies should be performed and repeated 4 hours and 12 hours post arrival

Postoperative transfusion according to established ICU protocol Blood loss 250mLhr NOTIFY SURGEON CONSIDER RETURN TO THEATRE

CONSISTANT WITH CURRENT PRACTICE - NO ADMINISTRATION OF rVIIa IN ICU

Re-exploration for bleeding Any patient returning to theatre will be treated at the discretion of medical staff involved The administration of rVIIa can be considered according to current guidelines Administration of coagulation products at discretion of treating doctors

Randomisation will be co-ordinated and supervised by the Trial Pharmacy at the Austin Hospital

Due to the expense of the drug instability in solution and the lack of availability of a similarly packaged placebo the mechanism to blind medical staff in theatre will involve an independent registered nurse preparing the drug in an opaque syringe according to a sealed envelope indicating placebo or trial drug Randomisation will be site specific for both the Austin Hospital and Warringal Private Hospital

Pharmacy will be notified when consent is obtained for a patient Two doses or rVIIa will need to be sent to theatre This will be stored in the blood fridge Any unused drug will be returned to Pharmacy with full documentation of drug handling Nursing staff involved in trial medication preparation will be educated regarding the necessity of not revealing whether actual drug or placebo was used

Statistics

Power Analysis Based on our pilot data we anticipate 80 or more of the group receiving rVIIa will achieve haemostasis adequate for chest closure without any further intervention to improve coagulation Our primary endpoint We conservatively estimate that only 30 or less of placebo group will achieve haemostasis adequate for chest closure without any further intervention to improve coagulation Assuming a p value of 05 and power of 08 analysis indicates that to show a 50 difference between groups 34 subjects are needed 17 in each arm To allow for any withdrawals we plan to enrol 40 patients in the study Based on current drug usage the recruitment will take 2 years

Results Analysis Primary endpoints will be assessed by chi-squared analysis Secondary endpoints parametric and non-parametric analysis as appropriate No interim analysis is planned Subgroup analysis according to procedure and surgeon will be performed

Bias Because of the small number of subjects in this trial bias may be a problem Unequal distribution of each of the four procedures may occur and influence results The trial drug is thought to treat coagulopathic bleeding Any superimposed surgical bleeding may cause bias

Adverse Events Patients undergoing cardiac surgery represent a population at relatively high risk of a range of perioperative complications inherent to their underlying disease co-morbidities and the nature of the surgery being undertaken In the pilot study the mortality rate was 25 It is not intended to report the occurrence all of these events to the Human Research and Ethics Committee Any adverse events that do arise specifically in relation to the conduct of the proposed study will be reported to the Committee

Feasibility Our pilot series of 40 cases from 2 centres was collected over a 24-month period Assuming similar workloads and the addition of another centre Alfred Hospital recruitment should be completed in 24 months

HREC approval has been granted by Austin Health for the Austin site The same HREC is considering approval for the Warringal Private Hospital site and the Alfred hospital will be seeking similar approval from its own HREC

Study Oversight

Has Oversight DMC: None
Is a FDA Regulated Drug?: None
Is a FDA Regulated Device?: None
Is an Unapproved Device?: None
Is a PPSD?: None
Is a US Export?: None
Is an FDA AA801 Violation?: None