Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Minimizing Post-Procedural Vascular Complications: Comparing Bivalirudin Versus Heparin/GP IIB/IIA in Patients Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
The purpose of this study is to compare the rates of vascular related complications in patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention assigned to one of two arms: 1) bivalirudin + provisional Gp IIB/IIIA use versus 2) heparin + Gp IIB/IIIA (eptifibatide (Integrilin®)) use.
Anti-thrombotic therapies have enhanced the safety of percutaneous coronary intervention
(PCI). In addition to aspirin, heparin and platelet glycoprotein (Gp) IIB/IIIA receptor
inhibition have been used as the reference strategy to reduce the incidence of ischemic
complications during coronary interventions 1. However, the success of this strategy is
limited by increased bleeding risk, prolonged drug infusions (12 hours), and patient
inconveniences (such as lying flat for hours until blood coagulation becomes normal and
sheaths can be safely removed). Peri-procedural bleeding due to vascular complications is
one of the most frequent complications of PCI and is associated with adverse events 2.
Newer anti-thrombotic strategies may further improve outcomes after PCI. The efficacy of a
direct thrombin inhibitor bivalirudin (Angiomax™) was investigated in a randomized
controlled clinical trial as a replacement for the strategy of heparin/Gp IIB/IIIA
inhibition in patients undergoing coronary intervention. The REPLACE-2 study, which
randomized over 6000 patients found short and long-term clinical outcomes with bivalirudin
were as effective as heparin/Gp IIB/IIIA inhibition combination with evidence of
significantly less major and minor bleeding 3, 4. This led to approval of the 0.75
mg/kg/1.75 mg/kg/hr dose of Angiomax® by the Food and Drug Administration for use as an
anticoagulant in patients with unstable angina undergoing PCI.
It is now routinely accepted that early sheath removal after PCI reduces femoral access site
complications and leads to earlier ambulation, earlier discharge, improved patient
satisfaction 5. Heparin-based anticoagulation requires monitoring of the coagulation status
to determine readiness for sheath removal because of the lack of predictable duration of
anticoagulation with heparin. Because clearance of bivalirudin occurs mostly by proteolytic
cleavage by thrombin, the drug has more predictable pharmacokinetics and exhibits linear
dose relationship with respect to plasma concentrations and coagulation assay endpoints 6.
Preliminary studies indicate sheath removal 2 hours after cessation of bivalirudin without
coagulation monitoring is safe 5. While REPLACE-2 suggested that catheterization related
vascular complications were decreased with bivalirudin, specific data on these endpoints and
others such as time to ambulation and time to discharge were not collected because of the
blinded nature of the trial. Currently the rate of vascular complications at MGH for
patients undergoing PCI is 4.0% which significantly exceeds the national rate of 1.9% (95%
CI 1.1 to 3.2) 7.
We will conduct a randomized clinical trial in patients undergoing PCI to compare the rates
of vascular related complications between patients assigned to one of two arms: 1)
bivalirudin + provisional Gp IIB/IIIA use versus 2) heparin + Gp IIB/IIIA (eptifibatide
(Integrilin®)) use. The primary endpoint will be a composite of vascular related groin
complications (MAVE-major adverse vascular endpoints as defined in next section). Secondary
endpoints will be 1) time to sheath pull; 2) time to ambulation; and 3) occurrence of major
and minor bleeding peri-catheterization.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label
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