Transfusion-associated Circulatory Overload Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pre-transfusion Furosemide in Patients at High Risk of Transfusion-associated Circulatory Overload - The Transfusion-Associated Circulatory Overload Best Eliminated With Lasix (TACO-BEL) Study: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
This is a pilot double-blinded placebo-controlled randomized controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate the feasibility of conducting a multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled trial to assess the efficacy of pre-transfusion furosemide in preventing transfusion-associated circulatory overload (TACO) in hemodynamically stable inpatients aged 65 years or older receiving a single unit red blood cell transfusion. Patients will be randomly allocated to receive either furosemide (20mg intravenous) or placebo (saline) within 60 minutes of starting a red blood cell (RBC) transfusion. Randomization will be stratified by centre and renal dysfunction (creatinine clearance ≥ 60 mL/min or < 60 mL/min). This is a blinded trial: patients, care-providers (physicians and nurses), data collectors, outcome adjudicators, and data analysts will not be aware of group allocation.
The investigators proposed this pilot study to assist us in determining the feasibility of
conducting a definitive multicenter randomized trial across Canada.
Rationale:
The rationale for this study includes: (1) TACO is the leading cause of morbidity and
mortality due to transfusion; (2) risk factors for TACO include older age, renal dysfunction
and positive fluid balance; (3) furosemide is a diuretic commonly prescribed for fluid
overload; (4) furosemide can decrease pulmonary artery pressures; and (5) clinical
uncertainty as to the effect of furosemide in preventing TACO. The investigators will enroll
80 patients in this pilot study at two centers.
Hypothesis:
The investigators hypothesize that 80 patients can be enrolled in the trial within a 2-month
period
Justification:
If pre-transfusion that furosemide decreases the rate of TACO with red blood cell
transfusion, clinical practice worldwide would change. Over 800,000 patients in Canada
receive a blood transfusion annually and many are at high risk for TACO and may benefit from
this simple, low-cost intervention. This intervention could easily be generalizable
worldwide. There are practical challenges related to patient recruitment, adherence to trial
protocol and data collection, all of which the TACO-BEL Pilot Trial will seek to measure.
Objectives:
The primary outcome of this trial is to determine the feasibility of performing a large
multi-centre, randomized, placebo-controlled trial with concealed allocation and blinded
outcome assessment, adequately powered to determine a clinically significant effect of
pre-transfusion furosemide on the incidence of transfusion-associated circulatory overload.
Primary outcome measure is the number of patients enrolled within a two-month period
Secondary feasibility outcome measures include:
1. Proportion of patients screened meeting eligibility criteria
2. Proportion of eligible patients consenting to participate
3. Proportion of consenting patients receiving the allocated treatment
4. Proportion of treated patients completing follow-up assessment
5. Proportion of patients in which blinding was maintained throughout study
Research Method:
Patients meeting inclusion criteria will be identified by reviewing transfusion orders
received by the blood transfusion laboratory or by referral from ordering physicians; these
patients will then be approached by study personnel to obtain pre-transfusion informed
consent. Randomization will be performed by pharmacy at the time of drug preparation. The
randomization code will be generated in random blocks of 4 to 6, stratified by center, and
renal function at time of randomization (creatinine clearance < 60 and ≥ 60 mL/min) using a
computer based randomization program.
Intervention:
Patients will be administered a bolus dose of 20mg furosemide (20mg/2mL) intravenously
within 60 minutes prior to the start of the red blood cell transfusion. Patients randomized
to placebo will be administered an equal volume of normal saline intravenously immediately
within 60 minutes prior to the start of the red blood cell transfusion.
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Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
NCT04194047 -
Effects of Red Blood Cells Transfusion on Renal Blood Flow
|
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Terminated |
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Phase 2 | |
Completed |
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TACO Crossover TRIAL
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N/A |