Anemia Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Transfusion Triggers in Vascular Surgery Trial: Two Different Transfusion Triggers for Postoperative Haemoglobin Separation and Adherence to Transfusion Strategies in Vascular Surgery: a Randomised Clinical Feasibility Trial
BACKGROUND
- Vascular surgical patients often receive red blood cell (RBC) transfusions in the
peri-operative period
- RBC transfusion may lead to improved outcome but on the other hand the intervention may
be harmful
- Danish Health and Medicines Authority recommends transfusion of RBC at hemoglobin below
5 mmol/L while local clinical guidelines recommend transfusion of RBC to maintain
hemoglobin levels above 6 mmol/L
- A large randomized clinical trial is needed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of RBC
transfusion in patients undergoing vascular surgery.
- A trial examining the effect of RBC transfusion on tissue oxygenation is used to test
the trial-design and feasibility for a trial evaluating post-operative mortality and
morbidity.
DESIGN Single-center, randomized, open-label trial including vascular surgical patients for
peri-operative red blood cell (RBC) transfusion.
If the patient drops out of the trial, either at his/her own request or due to withdrawal
from active therapy, the patient will be followed up in the intention-to-treat analyses.
PROTOCOL SUSPENSION
The patient can temporarily be suspended from the protocol in the following circumstances, if
the clinician in charge finds indication for blood transfusions not adhering to the planned
transfusion threshold:
- Uncontrollable bleeding, defined as loss of surgical hemostasis resulting in overt or
imminent hemodynamic instability with insufficient tissue oxygenation and increasing
lactate production OR
- Hypotension unresponsive to fluid replacement OR
- Decompensated heart failure OR
- Stroke, extremity- and intestinal ischaemia
SAMPLE SIZE With a total of 50 randomised patients, the trial is powered to
- Show difference in mean postoperative hemoglobin of 1.0 mmol/L. With a power of 95%, 5%
significance and a standard deviation of 0.9 mmol/L.
- Show a difference in 2 units (600 mL) of RBC transfused based on a standard deviation of
RBC transfusion volume of 717 mL, with a power of 80 % and 5% significance
- Produce a 97.5% confidence interval (CI) equal to the sample adherence prevalence plus
or minus 8% when the true prevalence of adherence is hypothesized to be 90%
- Detect a difference in near infrared spectroscopy-determined tissue oxygenation (ScO2)
of 6 % during surgery. With a power of 80%, 5% significance and a ScO2-standard
deviation of 7%
TIME-LINE The first patient is expected to be randomized June 8th 2015, the last will be
randomized March 31st 2016 and the trial database is expected to be closed ultimo June 2016.
The main manuscript will be submitted shortly thereafter.
PROTOCOL AMENDMENTS
1. The Ethical Committee of Region Zealand has approved a protocol amendment of March 29th
2016 for permission of extending the trial period to the end of 2016.
2. On September 20th 2016 The Ethical Committee of Region Zealand approved a protocol
amendment of September 16th 2016 for permission of extending the sample size to 58
patients and extending the trial period to June 31st 2017.
The 2nd amendment was submitted to compensate for an unexpected high rate of patients
randomised postoperatively and thus to secure a sufficient sample size (n=44) for the primary
outcome measure, postoperative Hb, and the secondary outcome measures NIRS and ROTEM.
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