Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02628366
Other study ID # R-15-302
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date April 3, 2017
Est. completion date March 31, 2021

Study information

Verified date June 2023
Source Lawson Health Research Institute
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

People with failed kidneys need an artificial kidney machine (called dialysis) to remove toxins and extra fluid from the body. Most patients receive dialysis treatments at a hospital three times a week. During treatment, a patient's blood pressure may drop, causing dizziness and muscle cramping. Repeated drops in blood pressure can also injure the heart and brain. Over time, this can lead to heart attacks, strokes, and sometimes death due to cardiovascular causes. New research shows that cooling the temperature of the dialysis fluid (called dialysate) can reduce heart and brain injury. In most hospitals, all patients' dialysate temperature is set at 36.5 ºC (to match body temperature). In a study of 73 patients, we showed that reducing the dialysate temperature by 0.5 ºC below body temperature protected the heart and brain from injury [1,2]. We now want to test this simple, safe, low-cost intervention in a large study with ~7500 dialysis patients in Ontario. We can lower the dialysate temperature on dialysis machines in Ontario at no added cost. This intervention has the potential to reduce many hospitalizations and deaths in Ontario, and relieve suffering in patients with kidney failure.


Description:

1. Statement of the health problem or issue Dialysis is a life-saving treatment for patients with kidney failure. However, over 20% of patients die within one year of starting dialysis from heart disease or stroke. One reason that so many dialysis patients die from heart diseases and strokes may be related to the dialysis treatment itself. During dialysis, blood pressure often drops, and the flow of blood and oxygen to the heart and brain is reduced. Over time, this can cause significant damage to vital organs and result in heart attacks, strokes, and even death due to cardiovascular-related causes. Our team was the first to show that the heart and brain become starved of blood and oxygen during dialysis. We and others have shown that lowering the temperature of dialysis (to just below the patient's own body temperature) improves blood flow and protects the heart and brain during dialysis. We will now determine if this method can prevent heart attacks and strokes in a large population of dialysis patients. 2. Objective of your project The purpose of this study is to test the effect of outpatient hemodialysis centers randomized to (1) a personalized temperature-reduced dialysate protocol or (2) a standard-temperature dialysate protocol for 4 years on cardiovascular-related death and hospitalizations. 3. How will you undertake your work? We will conduct a cluster randomized controlled trial. Our study will include ~7500 dialysis patients in 84 dialysis centres across Ontario. The name of this study is MyTEMP. Patients in 42 of the 84 dialysis centres will be in the treatment group and they will receive personalized dialysis (0.5-0.9ºC below their measured body temperature). Patients in the other 42 centres will be in the control group and will receive standard dialysis at a fixed temperature of 36.5ºC. This study will last for four years. At the end of four years, we will compare the rate of cardiovascular-related deaths, heart attacks, strokes, and heart failure in the treatment and control groups. 4. What is unique/innovative about your project? We usually need to study a large number of patients in a clinical trial to reliably understand the effects of treatment. Normally, a study with 7500 patients would cost more than $15 million dollars to conduct; however, our study will provide a reliable answer to the question being asked and cost less than $2 million. This is because we will use data that is already being collected by our healthcare system. For example, when a patient is hospitalized for a heart attack or stroke, this information is recorded in a secure healthcare database. We will be able to analyze these healthcare data at the end of the study (and link patient outcomes to the type of dialysis treatment received (i.e. treatment or control)). This innovative study design means that our study will be much larger (but cost much less) than a traditional clinical trial. This pragmatic trial includes all patients who receive chronic in-centre hemodialysis patients in participating Ontario centres. High-risk patients with multiple comorbidities, including cognitive impairments or disabilities, who are often excluded from trials because of their high-risk status are eligible for participation in the MyTEMP trial. By including patients from a variety of medical, ethnic, geographic, and socioeconomic backgrounds, the results of our trial should be broadly generalizable. 5. What is the impact of the proposed research? Currently, many patients worldwide receive hemodialysis with a dialysate temperature of 36.5ºC to 37.0ºC. Lowering the dialysate temperature below a core body temperature is a promising intervention that has the potential to reduce the risk of cardiovascular-related mortality and major adverse cardiovascular events in patients on hemodialysis. At four years of follow-up, our trial is powered to detect a minimum 20% hazard rate difference in the composite outcome of time to first cardiovascular-related mortality or hospitalization for major cardiovascular events among centres that use a temperature-reduced personalized hemodialysis protocol compared with centres that use a standard-temperature hemodialysis protocol.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 84
Est. completion date March 31, 2021
Est. primary completion date March 31, 2021
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group N/A and older
Eligibility This pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial has only two inclusion criteria: Inclusion Criteria: - The hemodialysis centre must have cared for a minimum of 15 outpatients being treated with maintenance in-centre hemodialysis on January 1st, 2017. - The medical director of the hemodialysis centre (who acted as the centre's gatekeeper) must have been willing for their centre to adopt the randomly allocated dialysate temperature protocol for the duration of the trial. Exclusion Criteria: - The centre cares for less than 15 patients being treated with conventional in-centre hemodialysis.

Study Design


Intervention

Other:
Personalized Dialysate Temperature
Dialysis centres randomized to the intervention will provide temperature-reduced personalized hemodialysis. A nurse will set the temperature of the dialysate to 0.5°C below each patient's body temperature measured just before starting the dialysis treatment. We are aware that some dialysis machines (e.g. Fresenius 5008) are only able to modify dialysate temperature by 0.5°C increments. For centres with those machines, the nurse will set the dialysate temperature 0.5 to 0.9 °C below each patient's body temperature (measured before starting the hemodialysis treatment) to a minimum of 35.5°C.

Locations

Country Name City State
Canada London Health Sciences Centre London Ontario

Sponsors (8)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Lawson Health Research Institute Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), Cancer Care Ontario, Dialysis Clinic, Inc., Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Population Health Research Institute, The Kidney Foundation of Canada

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Canada, 

References & Publications (2)

Presseau J, Mutsaers B, Al-Jaishi AA, Squires J, McIntyre CW, Garg AX, Sood MM, Grimshaw JM; Major outcomes with personalized dialysate TEMPerature (MyTEMP) investigators. Barriers and facilitators to healthcare professional behaviour change in clinical trials using the Theoretical Domains Framework: a case study of a trial of individualized temperature-reduced haemodialysis. Trials. 2017 May 22;18(1):227. doi: 10.1186/s13063-017-1965-9. — View Citation

Ward JM, Getchell L, Garg AX; MyTEMP Investigators. Patient and caregiver involvement in a multicentre clustered hemodialysis trial. CMAJ. 2018 Nov 7;190(Suppl):S32-S33. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.180403. No abstract available. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Composite of All-Cause emergency department visits or all-cause hospitalizations (repeated measure) Patients on hemodialysis are frequently hospitalized and account for 5% to 7% of healthcare expenditures in developed countries despite comprising a very small percentage of the general adult population. These patients have several characteristics that make them vulnerable to hospitalization and emergency department use, including multimorbidity, high rates cardiovascular and complications, and complex medication regimens. The historic hazard rate for emergency department visits was 1.05, all-cause hospitalization was 0.65, and the composite all-cause emergency department visits or hospitalizations over a 4-year period (from April 1, 2013 to March 31, 2017) for an open cohort was 1.22 events per person-year. Four Years
Other All-Cause emergency department visits (repeated measures) Four Years
Other All-cause hospitalizations (repeated measure) Four years
Other Hospital encounter with lower limb amputation Patients on hemodialysis, especially those with diabetes, have a high incident rate of amputation. Amputations are associated with cardiovascular risk factors and likely linked to vascular injury caused by hemodialysis-induced ischemia, which complicates pre-existing arterial disease and diabetes related injury. We will compare the lower extremity amputation (excluding digit amputations) rate for the two groups. In separate analyses, we will estimate the amputation rate for subgroups of patients with diabetes, as well as those with and without a history of lower extremity amputation in the 10 years before the trial start date or the date entering the trial cohort for new patients starting MyTEMP after April 3rd, 2017. Four Years
Other Hospital encounter with a major fall or fracture Many patients on dialysis are frail and prone to falling, which may also predispose them to suffer a fracture. Bone fractures are an important outcome and can result in morbidity, high economic costs, and mortality. Intra-dialytic hypotension might increase the rate and severity of falls after a hemodialysis session leading to additional fractures requiring hospitalizations. We will estimate the rate of fractures for both arms of the trial. Four Years
Other Intradialytic hypotension Nadir systolic blood pressure < 90 mmHg anytime during dialysis session when value prior to session was = 90 mmHg, or ii) drop in systolic blood pressure = 30 mmHg anytime during session from value prior to session. Four years
Other Intradialytic hypotension alternate definition #1 Systolic blood pressure < 90 mmHg alone (only count if systolic blood pressure is =90 mmHg pre-dialysis). Four years
Other Intradialytic hypotension alternate definition #2 At least a 25% relative reduction in nadir systolic blood pressure from pre-dialysis systolic blood pressure or nadir <90 mmHg (only count latter if not present pre-dialysis). Four years
Other Intradialytic hypotension alternate definition #3 At least a 25% relative reduction in nadir systolic blood pressure from pre-dialysis systolic blood pressure. Four years
Other Intradialytic hypotension alternate definition #4 A drop in nadir systolic blood pressure by = 35 mmHg from pre-dialysis systolic blood pressure. Four years
Primary Composite outcome of cardiovascular-related mortality or major cardiovascular event There are many challenges associated with selecting the primary endpoint in MyTEMP because of heterogeneity of the population, complexity of renal pathophysiology and its interaction with cardiovascular disease, and competing risks of non-cardiovascular-related death.
Our primary outcome is a composite outcome of cardiovascular-related mortality or a hospitalization for non-fatal major cardiovascular event which is any of myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke, or congestive heart failure. We chose a cause-specific death (i.e. cardiovascular) in our endpoint, in contrast to all-cause mortality, because non-cardiovascular causes of death are common in the hemodialysis population and the intervention is less likely to reduce the rate of such deaths. However, as a secondary outcome (see Secondary outcomes), we will also test the effect of personalized temperature-reduced dialysate temperature on all-cause mortality.
Four Years
Secondary Key secondary outcome: Between-group mean difference in the intradialytic drop of systolic blood pressure. A blood pressure drop is defined as the pre-dialysis systolic blood pressure minus the intradialytic nadir systolic blood pressure, where the greater the number (in the positive direction) the larger the drop. Four Years
Secondary Composite outcome of all-cause mortality or major cardiovascular event Composite of all-cause mortality and hospitalization for a major cardiovascular event including: myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke, or congestive heart failure. Four Years
Secondary All-cause mortality Four Years
Secondary Hospitalization for non-fatal myocardial infarction Four Years
Secondary Hospitalization for non-fatal congestive heart failure Four Years
Secondary Hospitalization for non-fatal ischemic stroke Four Years
Secondary Cardiovascular-related mortality Four Years
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT04892745 - Impact of Hemodialysis on Cutaneo-muscular Electrical Impedance
Not yet recruiting NCT04925674 - Study of HEC53856 in Patients With Subjects With End-Stage Renal Disease Receiving Dialysis. Phase 1
Active, not recruiting NCT03183245 - Comparison of the Human Acellular Vessel (HAV) With Fistulas as Conduits for Hemodialysis Phase 3
Completed NCT03365635 - Administration of Zepatier (Grazoprevir Plus Elbasvir) in Chronic Hemodialysis (HD) Patients With Hepatitis C Phase 4
Withdrawn NCT02904343 - Evaluation of Domestic Hemodialysis Machine: A Multi-center Clinical Study N/A
Withdrawn NCT01855334 - L-Arginine and Spironolactone Trial in Dialysis-Dependent ESRD Phase 4
Completed NCT01700465 - Estimating and Predicting Hemodynamic Changes During Hemodialysis N/A
Recruiting NCT01195519 - The Assessment of Quality of Life in Patients With Peritoneal Dialysis and Hemodialysis N/A
Completed NCT00737672 - GORE VIABAHN Endoprosthesis Versus Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty (PTA) to Revise AV Grafts in Hemodialysis Phase 3
Completed NCT00527774 - Effect of HCV Infection on Insulin Resistance and Malnutrition-inflammation Complex Syndrome in Regular Hemodialysis Patients N/A
Completed NCT00942253 - Exercise Training in Dialysis Patients With Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS) Phase 2
Completed NCT00850252 - Use of a Lifeline Graft in the A-V Shunt Model Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT00224081 - DRIVE Trial (Dialysis Patients' Response to Intravenous [IV] Iron With Elevated Ferritin) Phase 4
Completed NCT00776750 - Influenza Vaccination in Hemodialysis Patients and Renal Transplant Recipients Phase 4
Recruiting NCT06351007 - Educational Program on Dietary Adherence and Nutritional Knowledge in Chronic Kidney Disease Patients (EPAK) N/A
Withdrawn NCT03664141 - Impact of Cannabis Oil on Nutrition in Hemodialysis Patients Study (ICON-HP Study) Phase 3
Completed NCT03909698 - Antibiotic Dosing in Patients on Intermittent Hemodialysis
Recruiting NCT03311321 - Vitamin K to Slow Progression of Cardiovascular Disease Risk in Hemodialysis Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT06098924 - HD Patients' Depression and Happiness
Recruiting NCT03419923 - Three Anticoagulation Strategies for Hemodialysis in Patients at Risk of Hemorrhage N/A