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Clinical Trial Summary

INTRODUCTION Vascular complications in kidney transplantation constitute one-third of the early graft loss (EGL) that can be prevented by timely diagnosed cases. A vascular monitoring device may have a possible role in the early identification of graft hypoperfusion critical to reducing graft loss. AIM To evaluate the feasibility of an Implantable Doppler probe as a vascular monitoring device in kidney transplant patients and by obtaining the vital information, inform the protocol development of a definitive RCT. METHODS AND ANALYSIS A mixed-method research design is selected. The quantitative study will comprise a feasibility RCT (fRCT) that will compare demographical characteristics and surgical outcomes of patients that will undergo kidney transplant surgery with vascular monitoring device (intervention group, n=25) against those with standard care clinical observation (control group, n=25). Descriptive statistics will be used to summarise the results that will assess the vascular monitoring capability of implantable Doppler probe in the early postoperative period of kidney transplant patients. The results will provide estimates for surgical outcomes essential to inform the sample size calculation for the definitive study. Information related to the fluency of research methods, availability of research resources, management support, potential challenges faced during the fRCT will be compiled to generate realistic estimates of important parameters for the definitive study. The results will be following the CONSORT updated guidelines for reporting feasibility studies. Qualitative semi-structured interviews of stakeholders (n=12) recruited by purposive sampling will be conducted to explore their experiences of participating in the study, acquire suggestions regarding application of implantable Doppler probe monitoring, and the post implantation patient care. All interviews will be audio-recorded with verbatim transcription. Data will be analysed following the six-phase guide to doing thematic analysis in the NVivo software. The results will be reported in accordance with the consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ) checklist. IMPACT It is anticipated that this study will also elaborate on a possible role of implantable Doppler probe monitoring to improve kidney transplant patient safety, graft survival, service quality improvement, and financial savings in the NHS.


Clinical Trial Description

AIM: To evaluate the usefulness of an implantable continuous vascular monitoring device in kidney transplant surgery and to inform the protocol development of a definitive planned RCT. OBJECTIVES Feasibility RCT OBJECTIVE 1 To assess the capability of the implantable vascular monitoring device in the early postoperative period of kidney transplant patients. OBJECTIVE 2 To assess the research methods used to compare vascular monitoring device with the standard care and to estimate surgical outcome measures essential to inform the sample size calculation for the definitive planned RCT. OBJECTIVE 3 To assess the availability of research resources, management support, potential barriers and challenges for the definitive planned RCT. EMBEDDED QUALITATIVE STUDY OBJECTIVE 4 To assess the acceptability of vascular monitoring device in clinical practice and get suggestions on the protocol development of the definitive planned RCT TRIAL DESIGN Mixed methodology two-arm feasibility randomised controlled trial with an embedded qualitative study. RECRUITMENT The participants will be recruited from the patients undergoing kidney transplant surgery at Southwest transplant centre, UHPNT. The chief investigator will recruit the eligible participants and obtain their consent for the study. The normal care pathway followed at our transplant unit is designed in line with the unpredictable nature of the speciality. The investigators are offered organs by NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT) from deceased donors with a notice period of 12-14 hours. The kidney transplant recipient is admitted to the hospital about 8-10 hours before the surgery. The patient is prepared and consented to surgery during this interval. The patient is then moved to the operation theatre for transplantation. After surgery, the patient is transferred to the renal ward for postoperative care. All patients receive standard care clinical observation to monitor their graft function. In addition to the standard care clinical observation, the clinician looking after the patients may request additional departmental ultrasound scans in the first 72 hours depending on the graft function and the condition of the kidney transplant recipient. There will be no difference in the recruitment process, consent, and the postoperative care of kidney transplant patients with the monitoring device or with the standard care clinical observation. TRIAL PARTICIPANTS The participants of the study will consist of the patients who will have kidney transplant surgery with or without the implantable vascular monitoring device during the study duration at the Southwest transplant centre UHPNT. TRIAL SETTINGS Southwest transplant centre, University Hospitals of Plymouth NHS trust. DURATION OF THE STUDY 24 months SAMPLE SIZE The sample size is chosen based on the practicalities of conducting a feasibility study. The sample size is a realistic recruitment figure for 24 months based on a recent retrospective study conducted at the Southwest transplant centre leading to this research project. The data suggested that about 65-70 kidney transplants were performed annually in our unit. The randomised controlled feasibility trial aims to recruit 50 kidney transplant patients within a 24-month period; 25 in intervention group and 25 in control group. In this study, the investigators propose to attach an implantable continuous vascular monitoring device to half (i.e. 25) of the kidney transplant patients (intervention Group) during their surgery. Postoperatively, these patients will receive graft surveillance by the monitoring device in addition to the standard care clinical observation. The other half (i.e. 25) of the kidney transplant patients (control Group) will receive the standard care clinical observation. CONSENT The chief investigator (CI) will inform the patients about the study and invite them to participate. Consent to enter the study will be sought from each participant only after a full explanation of the study. An information leaflet will also be offered. A duly signed informed consent form will be obtained from patients that agree to participate in the study. RANDOMISATION The patients who consent to participate in the study will be randomised into two groups (i.e. intervention and control) by a secure online computer sequence generator system (https://www.randomizer.org/#randomize). Randomisation will be completed in a 1:1 ratio using random permuted blocks. The patients allotted to the Intervention group will have kidney transplants with the implantable continuous vascular monitoring device while those allotted to the Control group will have kidney transplants with standard care clinical observation (i.e. without implantable continuous vascular monitoring device). TRIAL ARMS INTERVENTION GROUP (KIDNEY TRANSPLANT PATIENTS WITH THE IMPLANTABLE CONTINUOUS VASCULAR MONITORING DEVICE) The intervention that is intended to be investigated is the implantable continuous vascular monitoring device manufactured by COOK Medical Company. Its principle intended use is continuous monitoring of the graft perfusion (i.e. transplanted kidney) for the first 72 hours postoperatively. The kidney transplant patients in the intervention group will receive implantable continuous vascular monitoring device surveillance for the first 72 hours in addition to the standard care clinical observation as part of their postoperative care. The device will be removed after 72 hours. CONTROL GROUP (KIDNEY TRANSPLANT PATIENTS WITH STANDARD CARE CLINICAL OBSERVATION): The kidney transplant patients in this group will receive the standard care clinical observation as part of their postoperative care. Their graft will be monitored postoperatively by the standard care clinical observation as per the NHS protocol. BLINDING Blinding of the participants (kidney transplant patients) to the outcome of the randomisation will not be possible due to the nature of the intervention. Similarly, the healthcare professionals (clinicians and nurses) taking care of the patients and collecting the data postoperatively cannot be blinded. DATA COLLECTION Data collection will take place in the immediate period after the kidney transplant in recovery, at 24, 48, and 72 hours postoperatively in the ward and at the three-monthly postoperative clinic visit. The data will be collected prospectively and independently for both groups over a two year period. Data collection may culminate earlier if the required sample size is achieved. It will include participant's demographic characteristics and the outcomes that will be measured to achieve the respective objectives of the study. INTENTION TO TREAT ANALYSIS The data of the participants who will be randomised into the two groups (i.e. Intervention Group and Control Group) will be summarised separately in their respective groups. DATA ANALYSIS It is inappropriate to use inferential statistics in feasibility study data to formally test the effectiveness of an intervention. Data analyses using descriptive statistics will be performed in IBM SPSS version 25.0. The means and standard deviations will be considered as the representative value of the continuous variables (i.e. participant's demographic characteristics). The categorical variables (i.e. surgical outcomes) will be expressed by frequency distributions (percentages) and elaborated using tables and graphs. The participant's demographic or baseline characteristics in both groups will be summarised separately using descriptive statistics. The numerical data for both groups will be compared in the tabular form to demonstrate whether or whether not the participant's baseline characteristics in the Intervention and Control groups are identical. The outcomes for each objective in both groups (i.e. intervention and control) will be summarised using descriptive statistics. The numerical data from both groups will be compared to describe the feasibility of the intervention and generate realistic estimates of important parameters for the definitive multi-centre RCT. EMBEDDED QUALITATIVE STUDY AIM This component of the trial is aimed at exploring the experiences (receiving/delivering the intervention) and suggestions of the stakeholders on participating in the study. OBJECTIVE To assess the acceptability of vascular monitoring device in clinical practice and to acquire suggestions and innovative ideas of the stakeholders on refining the design of definitive RCT, functioning of the implantable vascular monitoring device, and improving postoperative patient care. STUDY DESIGN An exploratory inductive approach will be used with the qualitative study design of phenomenology. Semi-structured interviews with open-ended questions will be used. PARTICIPANTS To ensure the selection of information-rich cases and to attain an all-around perspective consistent with the aim of this study, a purposeful sampling consisting of participants from all groups involved with the device will be done. The participants of the study must have experience with the vascular monitoring device and will be selected according to whoever is on-call on the day of kidney transplant according to the clinicians and nurse's duty rotation plan. They will comprise four clinicians, four nurses, and four kidney transplant patients. Maximum sample number (12) is described however; recruitment will be discontinued early if theoretical saturation is attained. Consent for the interview and further correspondence for member-checking will be obtained at the time. DATA COLLECTION The qualitative study will consist of semi-structured interviews with open-ended questions and conducted in line with the NIHR's instructions laid out in the health and social care research handbook for researchers. The interview guide used will compromise key steps like introduction, a brief description of the proposed study, explanation of the purpose of the study, consent, and interview questions which will be aided by probing questions if further elaboration is required. The duration of the interviews will last 40-45 minutes. The interview proceedings will be audio recorded with the participant's consent and will be deleted following transcription. The participants will be informed that any quotes used in the report would be pseudonymised and kept strictly confidential. Field notes will be taken during all interview sessions to ensure the richness of data. Interviews will be conducted in the kidney ward, which is selected to enable participants to relax and open up in their routine setup. The privacy of the interviews will be maintained to allow participant anonymity and will take place during the lunch break to avoid distractions from the clinical commitments. DATA ANALYSIS Thematic analysis will be performed in NVivo 12 qualitative analysis program. The chief investigator has a theoretical interest in the device. To reduce the potential for interviewer bias, the thematic analysis will be conducted by the inductive approach of data-driven identification of themes. Since all participants will have experience with the device, the thematic analysis will be done at the latent level to identify the underlying ideas and assumptions. Data extracts will be coded and categorised into themes, following the six-phase guide to doing thematic analysis. The result of this study will be reported in accordance with the Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ) checklist. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05634863
Study type Interventional
Source University Hospital Plymouth NHS Trust
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date April 1, 2022
Completion date July 1, 2023

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