Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Plasma Large-Volume Exchange Randomized Controlled Trial (PLEX-RCT)
Thrombotic thrombocytopenia purpura / hemolytic uremic syndrome (TTP/HUS) is a rare, life-threatening disorder. TTP/HUS causes multiple blood clots to form, which prevents blood from reaching the brain and kidneys. TTP/HUS affects 3-5 people per million per year. Anyone can develop TTP/HUS, but it is most common among 30-40 year olds, and women are twice as likely as men to acquire the condition. TTP/HUS sometimes develops as a result of medication use, pregnancy or cancer; however, for the majority of patients (80%) the cause of TTP/HUS is unknown. In 1991, researchers discovered that plasma exchange was superior to plasma infusion in treating idiopathic TTP/HUS. During plasma exchange the patient's blood plasma is removed and replaced with healthy blood plasma. Without plasma exchange, the survival rate for TTP/HUS is extremely low, with fewer than 5% of patients surviving. Treating TTP/HUS with plasma exchange improved the survival rate to 80%. Although this represents a dramatic improvement, researchers are still searching for methods to improve survival. No major advances in treating TTP/HUS have occurred in the past 20 years. Recent research suggests that high-dose plasma exchange may improve the survival of TTP/HUS patients. The investigators will conduct a randomized controlled trial to test whether treating TTP/HUS patients with high-dose versus standard-dose plasma exchange improves the treatment response. The investigators will recruit 150 patients with TTP/HUS from 9 centres across Canada over three years. The investigators will evaluate whether high-dose plasma exchange improves the treatment response, survival, and whether it reduces the number and volume of plasma exchange procedures and duration of hospital stay.
Background: Thrombotic thrombocytopenia purpura / haemolytic uremic syndrome (TTP/HUS) is a
rare blood disorder with a high mortality rate of >95% when left untreated. In 1991,
researchers discovered that treating TTP/HUS with plasma exchange vs. plasma infusion
dramatically improved the survival rate, from 60% to 80%.The optimal plasma dose for
treating TTP/HUS is unknown; however, recent research suggests that high-dose plasma
exchange may improve survival in patients with TTP/HUS.
Hypothesis: Treatment of TTP/HUS with high-dose vs. standard-dose plasma exchange will
significantly decrease the composite outcome of 1) treatment failure at day 5 and/or 2)
non-response or death at 2 weeks.
Methods: The investigators will conduct a multi-centre, parallel group randomized controlled
trial. The investigators anticipate recruiting 150 eligible patients with idiopathic TTP/HUS
from 9 centres across Canada over 2.25 years. Patients will be randomized to receive
high-dose plasma exchange (125 ml/kg/day up to 10 L/day plasma volume) or standard-dose
plasma exchange (50-75 ml/kg/day; approximately 1-1.5 plasma volume). The primary composite
outcome includes treatment failure at day 5 or non-response or death from any cause at 2
weeks. Secondary outcomes include the individual components of the primary outcome,
non-response or death from any cause at month 1 and month 6, days to remission, duration of
hospital stay, number and volume of plasma exchange treatments, and cost minimization.
Research Team: Our multi-centre team is part of the Canadian Apheresis Group, which was
established in 1980 and currently operates in 30 centres across Canada. Collectively, the
Canadian Apheresis Group treats 150 TTP/HUS patients each year. Our team includes
experienced haematologists, nephrologists, epidemiologists and a biostatistician. The
investigators have successfully collaborated on several projects and have an excellent
publication record (>50 publications across more than 15 journals including the New England
Journal of Medicine).
Timeline and Budget: Because TTP/HUS is a relatively rare disorder (an orphan disease), the
investigators will recruit patients over 2.25 years from across Canada to achieve a
sufficiently large sample size. A cost minimization study will be carried out in conjunction
with the RCT to provide insight into potential costing.
Future Directions: If the investigators can demonstrate that high-dose plasma exchange
significantly improves the primary outcome, the investigators will pursue a multi-national
collaboration with American, Chinese and European Centres to investigate other important
outcomes including optimal dosing, cost-effectiveness and survival.
Implications: This study has the potential to be the first major advancement in treating
TTP/HUS in twenty years.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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