Bleeding Clinical Trial
Official title:
Bivalirudin in Patient at High Risk of Bleeding Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Interventions.
Bleeding occurring during percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI has now emerged as one of the most common complication of PCI and adversely affect in-hospital, short- and long-term outcome.As bivalirudin proved its effectiveness in decreasing haemorrhagic events during PCI, its administration may be advocated in subjects deemed at high risk of bleeding.Objective of the present trial is to compare the safety and effectiveness of procedural use of bivalirudin in comparison to unfractionated heparin (UFH) in patients undergoing PCI deemed at high risk of procedural bleeding.
Antithrombotic and antiplatelet therapies have been the focus of extensive clinical
investigations over the past 2 decades. In PCI settings all therapies inhibiting coagulation
and primary hemostasis may limit ischaemic event rates, but are associated with an increased
risk of bleeding. Retrospective and registry data indicates that haemorrhage is associated
with mortality in patients undergoing PCI, emphasizing the potential importance of
minimizing bleeding, as well as ischemic events, bleeding has now emerged as one of the most
common complication of PCI. Major bleeding and blood transfusion have been strongly
associated with increased rates of in-hospital and late mortality, MI and repeat
revascularization after PCI. Also minor bleeding, although represent a complication
significantly less dangerous than major haemorrhages, are associated with prolonged
hospitalization, increased cost and adversely affect short- and long-term outcome.
UFH is the most commonly used anticoagulant drug during PCI. Bleeding events during PCI may
be in part due to the use of this drug. Bivalirudin (The Medicine's Co., Parsippany, NJ) is
a synthetic direct thrombin inhibitor approved for patients with stable and unstable
coronary syndromes undergoing PCI. Favourable properties of bivalirudin may minimize
bleeding.
Several clinical and procedural factors have been evaluated to identify patients exposed to
a higher risk of hemorrhages. Nikolsky et al. have developed a risk score (validated on
REPLACE-1 and REPLACE-2 data) based on clinical variable useful to predict the incidence of
major peri-procedural bleeding after contemporary PCI using the femoral approach. The
clinical variables considered into this algorithm are age >55 years (integer score 4 for
every 10 years over 55), female gender (integer score 3), eGFR <60 ml/min/1.73 m2 (integer
score 2), pre-existing anaemia (integer score 2), and administration of low-molecular weight
heparin within 48 hours (integer score 2). Global risk score 0-1 anticipated a major
bleeding rate of 1.3%; a risk score 2-6 was associated with a 1.8% risk of major bleeding; a
risk score 7-9 associated with a 2.7% risk if major bleeding, whereas a risk score >=10 was
associated with a 5% rate of major bleeding.
Our hypothesis is that bivalirudin, compared with UFH, may provide significant benefits in
term of bleeding in the selected population of patients deemed at high risk of bleeding. Our
aim is thus to prove, in a double-centres, randomized, blind controlled trial enrolling
patients undergoing PCI via the femoral approach, the efficacy in term of haemorrhagic
events and, secondarily, the effectiveness and safety of bivalirudin by means of the study
drug vs UFH.
Sample size estimation: in this high risk population we expect a rate of major and minor
bleeding of >5% for the UFH group vs a 3% event rate in the bivalirudin group. Aiming for a
0.05 alpha and 0.80 power, a total of 662 patients will need to be enrolled (331 patients
per group). This will be increased by about 25% (leading to a total of 830 patients) because
of considerable uncertainty about expected end-point rates.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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