Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Heparin Dose and Post Operative Bleeding in Cardiopulmonary Bypass Patients
Blood is anticoagulated using a drug named heparin during open-heart surgery to allow it to
safely pass through the heart-lung machine which pumps the blood throughout the body during
the surgery. Each patient is given the heparin they need for their surgery. This means some
patients receive more or less heparin than other patients. In this study, the investigators
will be evaluating the current anticoagulation protocol for open heart surgery in use at the
Royal University Hospital. The goal of this project is to compare patients who require and
receive more heparin for proper anticoagulation to those patients who require and receive
less heparin.
Open-heart surgery will proceed according to the standard hospital protocol. All research
participants will be treated according to standard post-open heart surgery protocol in the
ICU. This will include measurement of blood loss by keeping track of chest tube outputs and
administration of blood transfusions.
This study focuses on Saskatoon Health Region patients having open heart surgery in terms of
the protocol for anticoagulation and blood transfusions.
This study examines heparin doses of patients having cardiopulmonary bypass supported
surgery in terms of their sensitivity and resistance to heparin which is the standard
anticoagulant used. The investigators use the Heparin Management System, an analyser that
performs a heparin dose response test. In this test, a patient's whole blood is mixed with
increasing amounts of heparin to determine the required dose to achieve a set level of
anticoagulation. Patients who are found to resistant to heparin and needing a higher dose
are thought by some to bleed more post operatively. It is my view that when the patient is
given the correct amount of heparin which is then reversed by the correct amount of
protamine (the reversal agent) the bleeding is not determined by heparin dose.
Hypothesis statement: Higher doses of heparin do not cause increased postoperative bleeding
and transfusion events in the postoperative CPB patient.
Purposes of the Study
1. Compare heparin sensitive and resistant patients in terms of postoperative bleeding and
transfusion events.
2. Determine the incidence of heparin sensitivity or resistance in patients.
3. Identify preoperative factors that lead to heparin resistance or sensitivity in
patients.
4. Using the Heparin Dose Response test in determining heparin resistant and sensitive
patients.
5. Examination of anticoagulation protocol for open-heart surgery.
6. Effect of preoperative antiplatelet and anticoagulant therapy on perioperative care.
7. Use routine laboratory tests and values as well as common clinically available values
in the conduct of the study so that results would be clinically relevant.
This is a prospective observational study. Patients will be divided into two groups
dependant upon the results of their heparin dose response test; sensitive or resistant. Two
groups of thirty will be selected to achieve 90% power at the 0.025 level of significance
using a one-sided two-sample t-test.
The primary investigator will collect all data and submit the means to the statistician.
Based on anecdotal experience the investigators expect there will be no difference between
the two groups in terms of chest tube losses and transfusion events post-operatively.
This work is quite relevant to the investigators daily practice. Every open heart patient is
anticoagulated with heparin and bleeds post operatively. The investigators goal is a
reproducibly safe anticoagulation level and an acceptable level of chest tube losses. This
translates to getting patients out of the operating room in a timely fashion and minimizing
transfusion events.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective
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