Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The safety and efficacy of fibrinolysis in patients with an indwelling pleural catheter for multi-loculated malignant pleural effusion.


Clinical Trial Description

Malignant pleural effusion (MPE) is a condition where fluid accumulates in the chest (pleural space) due to the presence of cancer. The malignancy may is usually metastatic from the lung, breast, or elsewhere and the presence of a MPE usually causes significant morbidity, particularly shortness of breath. Once a MPE develops, the patient's disease cannot be cured, but symptoms of dyspnea can be palliated.

Malignant effusions usually recur after thoracentesis, a procedure to remove the fluid. Upon recurrence, patients usually undergo placement of an indwelling pleural catheter (IPC). This is a small tube that drains fluid from inside the chest into a bottle to be discarded. It is very effective at treating shortness of breath and is safe.

On occasion, these catheters stop functioning, leading to an increase in the effusion again. This may be due to small amounts of blood or debris such as fibrin that clog the catheter, or it may be related to the pleural fluid becoming too thick to drain. Medication, namely tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), can be placed inside the catheter to promote drainage. With simple clogging, the tPA acts like "Draino." For fluid that has become too thick and pleural effusions that won't drain due to loculations, the tPA helps dissolve debris in the pleural fluid to promote drainage. Without this drainage, patients remain impaired due to shortness of breath related to the fluid.

tPA is effective at draining the fluid when debris has clogged the catheter or the pleural space. However, the exact dosing is unknown. For "simple" clogging, small doses may be used. When extensive loculations are present, large doses may be required to help the patient. Two retrospective studies have looked at very small doses of tPA placed through the IPC with the goal of breaking up the clogs in the catheter itself. These studies used between 2 and 5 mg of tPA.1,2 At Yale-New Haven Hospital, 25 mg has typically been used due to historical preference. It is unknown whether high doses of tPA improve its therapeutic efficacy.

The investigators hypothesize that higher dose fibrinolysis with 25mg of tPA (compared with 2.5 mg) will provide more effective clearance of fluid loculations, resulting in improved radiographic appearance and less shortness of breath without an increased risk of complications, such as bleeding. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03678090
Study type Interventional
Source Yale University
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase Phase 2
Start date December 1, 2018
Completion date February 28, 2020

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04159831 - A Study to Evaluate LTI-01 in Patients With Infected, Non-draining Pleural Effusions Phase 2
Recruiting NCT02891642 - Liquid Biopsy With Immunomagnetic Beads Capture Technique for Malignant Cell Detection in Body Fluid
Completed NCT02232841 - Electrical Impedance Imaging of Patients on Mechanical Ventilation N/A
Completed NCT02045641 - Pleural and Pericardial Effusion Following Open Heart Surgery N/A
Completed NCT01948076 - Evaluation of a Pocket-Sized Ultrasound Device As an Aid to the Physical Examination N/A
Completed NCT01416519 - Physiotherapy Technique Decreases Respiratory Complications After Cardiac Operation N/A
Completed NCT01560078 - Efficacy Study of Thrice Weekly Directly Observed Treatment Short-Course Regimen in Tubercular Pleural Effusion N/A
Completed NCT04891705 - Point of Care Ultrasound Lung Artificial Intelligence (AI) Validation Data Collection Study
Recruiting NCT05759117 - Prospective Evaluation of Patients With Pleural Effusion
Recruiting NCT05910112 - Prospective Data Collection on Clinical, Radiological and Patient Reported Outcomes After Pleural Intervention
Completed NCT03896672 - Clinical Implementation of the Use of Positive Pressure in Chest Drainage N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT06075836 - AI Assisted Detection of Chest X-Rays
Recruiting NCT03728491 - Education and Training Competences in Thoracic Ultrasound N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03260088 - Evaluation Of Pleural Effusion At Assiut University Hospital N/A
Completed NCT03535883 - The Safety of Thoracentesis, Tunneled Pleural Catheter, and Chest Tubes in Patients Taking Novel Oral Anti-Coagulants
Completed NCT03296280 - Evaluation of Implementation of a National Point-of-Care Ultrasound Training Program
Completed NCT03661801 - Novel Pleural Fluid, Biopsy and Serum Biomarkers for the Investigation of Pleural Effusions
Completed NCT01778270 - Not Invasive Monitoring of Pleural Drainage N/A
Terminated NCT00402896 - Malignant Pleural Effusion With ZD6474 Phase 2
Recruiting NCT00103766 - Alteplase for Treatment of Empyema and Complicated Parapneumonic Effusion N/A