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Clinical Trial Summary

The PRODOSE trial is investigating a bespoke pharmacokinetic algorithm that calculates a tailored dose of protamine, required after cardiopulmonary bypass to reverse the action of heparin, based on individual patients and their actual bypass time.

The PRODOSE trial aims to demonstrate that the algorithm can be used to define a protamine dose that will more reliably return coagulation parameters to pre-heparin levels as well as decreasing the risk of post-operative bleeding and transfusion.

The trial aims to recruit 200 patients who will be randomised to either a bespoke or standard dose of protamine. The randomisation ratio will be 1:1 in the first instance but the trial uses an adaptive design and an interim analysis will be conducted after 100 patients have been randomised. The randomisation ratio could then be updated after the interim analysis to favour a superior arm whilst preserving statistical power levels.


Clinical Trial Description

Open-heart surgery is routinely conducted using a heart-lung machine. In order to conduct operations involving heart-lung machines a patient's coagulation system needs to be reliably suppressed to avoid clot formation. Clot in the extracorporeal circuit generally has fatal consequences.

In the vast majority of cases (>99%) the desired suppression of the blood clotting system is achieved by administering heparin. Although relatively short acting, with a half-life of about 150min for a full adult dose, heparin needs to be reversed after weaning from the heart-lung machine in order to avoid catastrophic bleeding post-operatively.

Heparin reversal is achieved by using protamine. This drug is derived from salmon sperm and is generally safe to use. However, in a reasonable number of cases it can have severe side effects, ranging from dangerous hypotension to high blood pressure in the lung circulation with adequately oxygenate the patient. Severe anaphylactic reactions have also been described. There is also increasing evidence that inadequately high doses of protamine may lead to an increased bleeding tendency.

There is controversy about the right dosing of protamine. Traditionally a pragmatic and empirical '1:1' formula is used reversing 100 Units of heparin with 1mg of protamine. This dosing regime does not take the decay of heparin during the time spent on the heart-lung machine into account and potentially exposes patients to unnecessarily high doses of protamine.

The research team was previously able to demonstrate in a pilot project that using a pharmacokinetic algorithm, which takes heparin decay into account, can reduce the protamine dose given to patients without increased bleeding or transfusion requirements.

The team have continued to develop this algorithm into a 2 compartmental model and are seeking to test the hypothesis that using the new formula can reduce patients' risk of the unwanted side-effects of protamine by reducing its dose. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03532594
Study type Interventional
Source Papworth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date April 16, 2018
Completion date January 30, 2020

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