Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Withdrawn

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00233246
Other study ID # 326
Secondary ID U01HL072299U01HL
Status Withdrawn
Phase Phase 3
First received October 3, 2005
Last updated June 5, 2014
Start date March 2006

Study information

Verified date June 2014
Source Massachusetts General Hospital
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority United States: Federal Government
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This study will compare patients with mild to moderate prolongation of the INR test who receive FFP infusions prior to invasive hepatobiliary procedures for bleeding complications to patients who do not receive FFP infusions. Bleeding complications will be defined as meeting one or more of the following:

1. Intrahepatic hematoma greater than 1 ml/kg of patient weight as seen on post-procedure ultrasound examination performed between 4 to 30 hours after the procedure.

2. Greater than 1.6g/dL hemoglobin decline measured within 4 to 30 hours post-procedure compared with the pre-procedure value, in the absence of another identified bleeding source to account for the hemoglobin drop.

3. Need for transfusion of packed red blood cells for procedure-related bleeding while in the study.

The secondary endpoints of this study will be: 1) The need to perform subsequent procedures (angiography, embolization, additional imaging study including computerized tomography (CT) scan, surgery) to diagnose or to arrest procedure-related bleeding OR the need for subsequent medical therapies (FFP, coagulation factor concentrates, anti-fibrinolytics) to treat procedure-related bleeding between time of procedure and the end of patient's time in the study. If necessary, the relationship of procedure or therapy to procedure-related bleeding will be assessed by an adjudication panel; 2) The predictive value of INR; 3) The effect of study treatment on change in INR; 4) The cost of preventing one bleed; 5) The predictors of bleeding other than INR; 6) The number of transfusion-associated adverse events encountered to prevent one bleed; and 7) The effect of treatment on bleeding grade.


Description:

BACKGROUND:

It is important to determine whether or not prophylactic FFP is necessary for patients with mild to moderate elevation of the INR who require an invasive procedure. It is also important to establish whether routine pre-procedure coagulation tests are predictive of bleeding outcomes at the time of a significant invasive procedure. Although prophylactic FFP is often given to such patients before invasive procedures, there is little evidence to show that pre-procedure INR in this range is predictive of procedure-related bleeding or that prophylactic FFP reduces this risk.

DESIGN NARRATIVE:

After obtaining consent and verifying eligibility requirements, the study staff will randomize the patient to one of two treatment groups. One group will receive a prophylactic FFP infusion before the hepatobiliary procedure. The other group will not receive prophylactic FFP.

The dose of FFP will be approximately 10 ml/kg. The dose of FFP for each patient will be determined in one of two ways in accordance with local policies: 1) rounding to the nearest integer number of units (Method 1); or 2) using split units (Method 2). The method chosen may vary between patients (e.g., a physician might decide to dose adult patients by rounding to the nearest integer number of units and to dose pediatric patients using split units).

Method 1: The dose of FFP will be the number of units that comes closest to a dose of 10 ml/kg, determined as follows: nearest integer to (10 x weight in kg)/200. Decimals .5 and higher should be rounded up to the next integer. Decimals less than .5 should be rounded down (e.g., a 70 kg patient would receive 4 units, while a 69 kg patient would receive 3 units).

Method 2: The dose of FFP will be chosen in order to come as close as possible to a dose of 10 ml/kg, and can contain either full units, split units, or a combination thereof.

After the FFP infusion (if any) and within 2 hours prior to the hepatobiliary procedure, blood will be drawn for laboratory tests and for the repository. Although Study of Hemostasis and Invasive Procedures (SHIP) will not be a truly blinded study, the clinicians performing the hepatobiliary procedure and the radiology team performing the post-procedure ultrasound will not be told whether the participant received prophylactic FFP. They will also not know the results of the immediate pre-procedure Prethrombin Time (PT)/INR and Partial Thomboplastin Time (PTT) tests.

Participants in the study may not be treated with any other systemic hemostatic agents prior to the procedure. Local hemostatic treatments may be used during the procedure, according to standard practice. The invasive hepatobiliary procedure techniques, all other concomitant treatments and interventions, and all post-procedure treatments and interventions are at the discretion of the treating physicians. Participants will be followed for clinical evidence of bleeding and will be treated as needed for any bleeding that may occur.

Repository samples will only be used for genetic and protein tests of hemostasis, coagulation, and fibrinolysis.

SHIP is designed as a one-sided non-inferiority study. The null hypothesis is that the proportion of patients not given prophylactic FFP who meet the criteria for the bleeding endpoint is at least .04 higher than the proportion of patients given prophylactic FFP who meet the criteria for the bleeding endpoint. The goal of this study is to determine whether there is strong evidence that the difference between the two treatment plans is not that large.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Withdrawn
Enrollment 0
Est. completion date
Est. primary completion date
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 4 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Undergoing one of the following percutaneous abdominal or transjugular invasive procedures: liver biopsy; liver-biliary abscess drainage; biliary tree drainage; or radio-frequency ablation of hepatic tumor

- Platelet count greater than or equal to 70,000/microliter

- INR greater than or equal to 1.3 and less than or equal to 1.9 (must not be based on a sample drawn within 24 hours of any prior FFP treatment)

- A PTT less than or equal to 50 sec

Exclusion Criteria:

- Use of warfarin, heparin, low molecular weight heparin, or other anticoagulant therapy within 5 days of the planned procedure (exceptions: prophylactic heparin injections into central venous catheters for catheter maintenance, prophylactic heparin (standard or low-dose) for prevention of deep venous thrombosis, and/or aspirin)

- History of severe allergic reaction to plasma products

- Use of any of the following second-generation anti-platelet agents: abciximab, tirofiban, clopidogrel, or ticlopidine

- Currently receiving any dialysis

- History of clinically significant bleeding diathesis, including Hemophilia A or B, von Willebrand's Disease, or congenital Factor VII deficiency

- Known history of a coagulation-factor inhibitor within the month prior to the procedure (In the absence of a known history, testing is not required)

- Active major bleeding; bleeding from gastrointestinal, pulmonary, mouth/throat, genito-urinary tract, or central nervous system sites (excludes guaiac positive stool sample without gross blood or melena, minor epistaxis, minor gum bleeding, microscopic hematuria, superficial bruises, normal menses, or minor vaginal spotting)

- Pediatric patients requiring sedation in order to undergo a post-procedure ultrasound examination

- Already received FFP in the 24 hours before the planned invasive procedure

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Procedure:
FFP Infusion


Locations

Country Name City State
United States Emory University Atlanta Georgia
United States Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore Maryland
United States University of Maryland Medical Center Baltimore Maryland
United States Massachusetts General Hospital Boston Massachusetts
United States University of North Carolina Hospital Chapel Hill North Carolina
United States University of Texas SW Medical Center Dallas Texas
United States Duke University Medical Center Durham North Carolina
United States University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics Iowa City Iowa
United States Blood Center of SE Wisconsin Milwaukee Wisconsin
United States University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota
United States Weill Medical College of Cornell University New York New York
United States University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania
United States University of Pittsburgh Presbyterian and Shadyside Hospital Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
United States Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota
United States Puget Sound Blood Center Div of Research Seattle Washington

Sponsors (3)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Massachusetts General Hospital National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), Transfusion Medicine/Hemostasis Clinical Research Network

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Clinically significant bleeding (measured 4 to 30 hours after invasive hepatobiliary procedure)
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT02239991 - Management of Perioperative Coagulopathy With Thromboelastometry (ROTEM) in Liver Transplant N/A
Completed NCT01435304 - The Effect of the Hemobag® Ultrafiltration System on Blood Conservation and Coagulation After Cardiopulmonary Bypass N/A
Completed NCT00969319 - Effekt-2 - Efficacy and Safety of Long-term Treatment With KOGENATE® FS in Latin America N/A
Completed NCT00091494 - Socioeconomic Patterning of Inflammation and Hemostasis - Ancillary to MESA N/A
Completed NCT00005481 - Epidemiology of Impaired Coagulant Balance in Diabetes N/A
Recruiting NCT02379104 - ROTEM® Sigma Performance Evaluation - Method Comparison With Predicate Device and Reference Intervals N/A
Withdrawn NCT02774317 - Pilot Study to Compare Fresh Frozen Plasma With 24-Hour Plasma in Babies Up to Age Six Months Phase 4
Recruiting NCT01930916 - Accuracy of a Portable International Normalized Ratio Monitor in Elderly Patients N/A
Completed NCT00168090 - Study of Safety and Efficacy of Antihemophilic Factor/Von Willebrand Factor Complex in Surgical Subjects With Von Willebrand Disease (vWD) Phase 4
Completed NCT01787552 - A Phase Ib/II Dose-finding Study to Assess the Safety and Efficacy of LDE225 + INC424 in Patients With MF Phase 1/Phase 2
Not yet recruiting NCT02782338 - The Effect of Voltaren-ophtha 0.1% Eye Drops on INR Levels (International Normalized Ratio) in Patients Taking Warfarin N/A
Unknown status NCT01349712 - Study to Test the Accuracy of a Prototype Handheld PT/INR Device N/A
Completed NCT01143909 - Transfusion of Fresh Frozen Plasma in Non-bleeding Intensive Care Unit (ICU) Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT04762550 - Thrombin Generation in Liver Transplant Surgery
Withdrawn NCT01221389 - Study Using Plasma for Patients Requiring Emergency Surgery Phase 4
Recruiting NCT03884725 - Fibrinogen Concentrate In Children Cardiac Surgery 2 Phase 4
Completed NCT00086476 - Study of Megakaryocytes From Patients With Abnormal Platelet Vesicles N/A
Completed NCT00516126 - Goal-orientated Therapy of Perioperative Disturbance in Hemostasis in Cardiac Surgery Phase 4
Completed NCT00708435 - Efficacy and Safety Study of BERIPLEX® P/N (Kcentra) Compared With Plasma in Patients With Acute Major Bleeding Caused by Anticoagulant Therapy Phase 3
Recruiting NCT00214656 - "Salvage Use" of Recombinant Factor VIIa After Inadequate Haemostasis in Complex Cardiac Surgery Phase 3