Critically Ill Clinical Trial
Official title:
PROphylaxis for ThromboEmbolism in Critical Care Trial (PROTECT Pilot)
PROTECT Pilot objective is to assess: 1) the feasibility of timely enrollment and complete, blinded study drug administration, 2) the bioaccumulation of LMWH in patients with acquired renal insufficiency and its association with bleeding, 3) the feasibility of scheduled twice weekly lower limb ultrasounds, and 4) recruitment rates for a future randomized trial.
Prophylaxis for Thromboembolism in Critical Care Trial:
PROTECT pilot Study
Background: Critically ill patients have an increased risk of deep venous thrombosis (DVT)
due to their acute illness, procedures such as central venous catheterization, and
immobility due to sedation and paralysis. Among patients in the intensive care unit (ICU),
DVT is an important problem, since thrombus propagation and embolization can lead to
potentially fatal pulmonary embolism (PE). Only 1 published randomized trial (n=119) in
medical-surgical ICU patients demonstrates that unfractionated heparin (UFH) prevents DVT as
compared to no prophylaxis; only 1 published randomized trial (n=223) in mechanically
ventilated COPD patients shows that low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) prevents DVT as
compared to no prophylaxis. A trial comparing LMWH and UFH for DVT prophylaxis in
medical-surgical ICU patients is needed. On one hand, LMWH is likely to be more effective at
VTE prevention and is associated with a lower rate of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia
(HIT). On the other hand, UFH is likely to be associated with a lower bleeding rate, and is
less expensive. The necessity for such a trial is highlighted by the fact that UFH is the
dominant method of VTE prophylaxis in critically ill patients in Canada, whereas LMWH is
standard of practice in western Europe.
Objectives: The scientific objectives of PROTECT are to determine the effect of LMWH versus
UFH on rates of DVT, PE, bleeding, thrombocytopenia and HIT in medical-surgical ICU
patients. The feasibility objectives of the PROTECT Pilot are to assess: 1) the feasibility
of timely enrollment and complete, blinded study drug administration, 2) the bioaccumulation
of LMWH in patients with acquired renal insufficiency and its association with bleeding, 3)
the feasibility of scheduled twice weekly lower limb ultrasounds, and 4) recruitment rates
for a future randomized trial.
Design: Prospective, concealed, stratified, block randomized, blinded, multicentre trial.
Setting: Canadian medical-surgical university-affiliated ICUs.
Inclusion criteria: Patients >18 years old with an anticipated ICU stay of >72 hours.
Exclusion criteria: Patients admitted to ICU post trauma, orthopedic surgery, cardiac
surgery, or neurosurgery, with severe hypertension, DVT, PE or major hemorrhage on admission
or within 3 months, coagulopathy, thrombocytopenia, creatinine clearance <30ml/min, or need
for therapeutic anticoagulation will be excluded. Patients with documented heparin allergy
or HIT, receipt of >2 doses of LMWH or UFH in ICU, contraindication to heparin or blood
products, and patients who are pregnant, undergoing withdrawal of life support, or enrolled
in a related randomized trial will also be excluded.
Methods: Using centralized telephone randomization, we will allocate 120 patients to
dalteparin 5,000 IU daily or unfractionated heparin 5,000 IU twice daily subcutaneously. The
ICU team and research personnel will be blinded to study drug. Patients developing
creatinine clearance <30 ml/min in ICU will have trough anti-Xa heparin levels; results will
be unavailable to the ICU team but used for blinded dose adjustment by the ICU Study
Pharmacist. Adherence to study protocol will be maximized using guidelines, interactive
education, audit, feedback and reminders. All patients will have bilateral lower limb
ultrasound within 48 hours of ICU admission, twice weekly until ICU discharge, upon clinical
suspicion of DVT, and within 7 to 10 days after ICU discharge. Patients with a positive or
indeterminant ultrasound for proximal DVT will have confirmatory ascending contrast
venography if no contraindications exist. We will diagnose PE according to a predefined
diagnostic algorithm. We will record bleeding events, thrombocytopenia, HIT and other
complications. Patients will be followed throughout their hospital stay. Adjudication
Committees blinded to other data will adjudicate indeterminant and positive VTE tests, test
complications and bleeding events. We will formally evaluate the success of our feasibility
objectives and use intention to treat analysis in this Pilot Study.
Primary Outcome: The primary outcome for the PROTECT Study is objectively confirmed proximal
DVT (proven symptomatic or asymptomatic DVT) diagnosed by bilateral lower extremity
compression ultrasound, confirmed by venography when possible.
Secondary Outcomes: There are four secondary outcomes: 1) PE diagnosed by the PE Diagnosis
algorithm, 2) bleeding, 3) anti-Xa levels associated with heparin dose adjustment, 4)
thrombocytopenia and HIT
Relevance: Results of the PROTECT Pilot Study will provide key feasibility and safety data
which will serve to plan a larger multicentre trial of LMWH versus UFH for VTE prophylaxis
in medical-surgical ICU patients.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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