Pulmonary Embolism Clinical Trial
Official title:
Extended Low-Molecular Weight Heparin VTE Prophylaxis in the Thoracic Surgery Population, a Prospective, Randomized Controlled Study
After any surgery, there is a risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE), including Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT) in the major veins of the legs and Pulmonary Embolus (PE) in the lungs. These clots are usually prevented by the administration of low-molecular-weight heparin, a blood thinner that prevents clotting. In most surgical specialties like thoracic or vascular surgery, this treatment is used until patients are discharged from the hospital. However, in orthopaedic surgery, there is strong evidence that longer term preventative treatment up to 35 days after hospital discharge helps to reduce VTE occurrences. In thoracic surgery, there is an even greater risk of developing PE because of the surgical stress, the common presence of cancer and direct damage to blood vessels in the lung during surgery. Despite the potential utility, the use of extended VTE prevention has never been evaluated in the thoracic surgery population. If extended treatment prevents clots, more patients will avoid complications related to VTE. There is currently very limited information available on the incidence of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in patients undergoing lung cancer resection and the utility of extended thromboprophylaxis (ET) in this patient population. Furthermore, in contrast to patients undergoing orthopaedic surgery where ET has become standard of care, duration of thromboprophylaxis is not well defined in this patient population. Therefore, there is a clear need to systematically evaluate the effects of extended VTE prophylaxis on the incidence of VTE in the post-op population.
There is currently very limited information available on the incidence of venous
thromboembolism (VTE) in patients undergoing lung cancer resection and the utility of
extended thromboprophylaxis (ET) in this patient population. Furthermore, in contrast to
patients undergoing orthopaedic surgery where ET has become standard of care, duration of
thromboprophylaxis is not well defined in this patient population. Therefore, there is a
clear need to systematically evaluate the effects of extended VTE prophylaxis on the
incidence of VTE in the post-op population.
As a pilot study, the primary outcome will involve feasibility measures. The investigators
aim to measure the proportion of recruitment within each centre, compliance, loss to
follow-up, and tolerability of the intervention, defined as the number and severity of
per-defined adverse events. The primary outcome of interest for the future full-scale trial
is the 30-day incidence rate of VTE following extended 30-day prophylaxis (defined as
pulmonary emboli or deep venous thromboembolism of the lower limb as detected by CT (Computed
Tomography) pulmonary angiography and full leg Doppler ultrasound, respectively) following
lung resection for malignancies.
The proposed pilot project is a multicenter blinded placebo-controlled randomized controlled
pilot clinical trial assessing the feasibility and effectiveness of extended-duration VTE
prophylaxis (30 days post-operatively) vs. short-term prophylaxis restricted to in-hospital
stay with outpatient injected placebo, in patients undergoing lung resection for lung cancer
or metastatic disease. All patients will receive both a peri-operative dose followed by
postoperative VTE prophylaxis for the duration of their hospital stay. Those who were
randomized to prolonged prophylaxis will continue the same dosage regime for an overall of 30
days, whereas the control group will receive placebo injections for the same duration of
time.
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