Post Partum Haemorrhage Clinical Trial
— IMoxOfficial title:
Intramuscular Oxytocics: A Randomised Control Trial of Intramuscular Carbetocin, Syntocinon and Syntometrine for the Third Stage of Labour Following Vaginal Birth
Verified date | August 2018 |
Source | North Bristol NHS Trust |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
A quarter of all pregnancy and child-birth related deaths are due to excessive bleeding after
the birth, "post-partum haemorrhage" (PPH). In the UK, PPH affects approx 10% of new mothers.
PPH can be frightening for women and cause them to need additional treatments prolonging
their hospital stay.
Commonly PPH is caused by an inadequately contracted womb after childbirth. Giving the mother
an injection of "uterotonic" medicine following the birth of their baby can prevent this. It
reduces the risk of PPH by 66%.
In the UK, the two medicines most commonly used are Syntocinon and Syntometrine. Syntometrine
is longer acting, but a published review of trials concluded that Syntometrine is no better
at preventing severe blood loss. Syntometrine is associated with more side effects including
nausea, vomiting, and high blood pressure, and has been linked with rare, but fatal, cases of
stroke. All guidelines therefore recommend Syntocinon for preventing PPH.Following a
telephone survey of all maternity units in the UK, 71.4% of units still routinely use
Syntometrine.
Carbetocin is a newer medicine, already widely used after caesarean section, but not yet
after vaginal birth. Other studies have shown that Carbetocin is slightly better at
preventing bleeding after birth when compared to Syntometrine, has fewer side effects than
Syntometrine, and that it may be just as good as Syntocinon at preventing PPH. No studies
have directly compared all three medicines or compared their overall cost; information vital
to the NHS.
Investigators propose a trial of 5712 women over 13 months, in four maternity units to
compare the effectiveness, side effects and cost of Syntocinon, Syntometrine and Carbetocin,
for women having a vaginal birth.
Women will be randomly allocated to receive one of these drugs. Women and staff will not know
which drug they receive. Staff will collect data such as the number of extra drugs and
treatments needed and the volume of blood lost. Women will be asked to complete a side
effects questionnaire. Investigators will perform an analysis of cost effectiveness once all
results are available.
Aim: To directly compare the effectiveness, side effects and cost of Syntocinon, Syntometrine
and Carbetocin given intramuscularly to prevent PPH in the 3rd stage of labour.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 5798 |
Est. completion date | October 30, 2018 |
Est. primary completion date | August 31, 2018 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - =18 years of age at time of delivery - Singleton pregnancy - Vaginal birth (spontaneous and instrumental) - >24 weeks gestation Exclusion Criteria: - Significant APH (>50ml) or suspected or proven placenta abruption - Maternal coagulation disorder - Intrauterine fetal death - Patients who would decline blood products if required - Known or suspected hypertensive disorders, including pre-eclampsia, pregnancy induced hypertension, essential hypertension (even if blood pressure well controlled) - Hypertension in labour, or patients who have not had their blood pressure checked in labour - Patients with peripheral, hepatic or cardiac disease - Patients with an allergy or hypersensitivity to any of the active ingredients in Carbetocin, Syntometrine or Syntocinon - Epilepsy |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | Royal United Hospital NHS Trust | Bath | Somerset |
United Kingdom | North Bristol NHS Trust | Bristol | Avon |
United Kingdom | Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS Trust | Gloucester | Gloucestershire |
United Kingdom | Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust | Nottingham | |
United Kingdom | Great Western Hospital | Swindon |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
North Bristol NHS Trust | Ferring Pharmaceuticals, Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Royal United Hospital Bath NHS Trust, University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust, University of Bristol, University of the West of England |
United Kingdom,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Requirement for additional uterotonic drugs within 24 hours of birth | Proportion of patients requiring additional uterotonic drugs after administration of study drug | From administration of prophylactic uterotonic agent to discharge from labour ward, within an expected average of 6 hours. | |
Secondary | Estimated volume of blood loss at delivery | Estimated volume of blood loss at delivery | Within 24 hours of delivery | |
Secondary | Transfusion of blood products (type and number of units given) | Number of units of blood transfused, or volume of own blood returned to patient if intraoperative cell salvage used | From delivery until transfer from Labour Ward, within an expected average of 6 hours. | |
Secondary | Manual removal of placenta in theatre | The requirement for the placenta to be removed in theatre | From delivery until transfer from Labour Ward | |
Secondary | Requirement for surgical intervention to manage PPH | As a result of significant PPH a surgical intervention was required to manage the PPH | From delivery until transfer from Labour Ward, within an expected average of 2 days | |
Secondary | Maternal hypertension | Hypertension | First two postnatal hours following administration of study drug | |
Secondary | Maternal hypotension | BP <90/60 | In first two postnatal hours | |
Secondary | Maternally-reported health-related quality of life | health-related quality of life reported by mother | 24 hours after delivery and 14 days after delivery | |
Secondary | Abdominal pain in the first two postnatal hours, recorded in Case Report Form (CRF) by midwife | Patient reported secondary outcome | First 2 post natal hours | |
Secondary | Post-partum vomiting | Patient reported secondary outcome | First 2 post natal hours | |
Secondary | Need for anti-emetic | Patient reported secondary outcome By definition, labour starts when the patient is at least 3-4cm dilated with regular, painful contractions. |
First 2 post natal hours | |
Secondary | Headache | Patient reported secondary outcome | First two post natal hours | |
Secondary | Maternal experience of side effects | Captured using maternal side effects questionnaire | In first two post natal hours |
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