Proposed Study of Tranexamic Acid - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 39
About This Presentation
Title:

Proposed Study of Tranexamic Acid

Description:

PK during adult CPB. Dowd NP Pharmacokinetics of tranexamic acid during cardiopulmonary bypass. ... Bolus Dose pre-CPB (given over 30mins) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:850
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 40
Provided by: philip142
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Proposed Study of Tranexamic Acid


1
Proposed Study of Tranexamic Acid
  • Philip Arnold

2
Questions
  • Efficacy of tranexamic acid
  • Appropriate dose

3
Fibrinolysis
4
Evidence Efficacy
  • 1. Zonis Z, Seear M, Reichert C, Sett S, Allen C.
    The effect of preoperative tranexamic acid on
    blood loss after cardiac operations in children.
    J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1996111(5)982-7.
  • 2. Reid RW, Zimmerman AA, Laussen PC, Mayer JE,
    Gorlin JB, Burrows FA. The efficacy of tranexamic
    acid versus placebo in decreasing blood loss in
    pediatric patients undergoing repeat cardiac
    surgery. Anesth Analg 199784(5)990-6.
  • 3. Chauhan S, Bisoi A, Modi R, Gharde P, Rajesh
    MR. Tranexamic acid in paediatric cardiac
    surgery. Indian J Med Res 200311886-9.
  • 4. Chauhan S, Bisoi A, Kumar N, Mittal D, Kale S,
    Kiran U, et al. Dose comparison of tranexamic
    acid in pediatric cardiac surgery. Asian
    Cardiovasc Thorac Ann 200412(2)121-4.
  • 5. Chauhan S, Das SN, Bisoi A, Kale S, Kiran U.
    Comparison of epsilon aminocaproic acid and
    tranexamic acid in pediatric cardiac surgery. J
    Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth 200418(2)141-3.
  • 6. Bulutcu FS, Ozbek U, Polat B, Yalcin Y, Karaci
    AR, Bayindir O. Which may be effective to reduce
    blood loss after cardiac operations in cyanotic
    children tranexamic acid, aprotinin or a
    combination? Paediatr Anaesth 200515(1)41-6.

5
Efficacy
6
Efficacy
7
Efficacy
8
Efficacy
  • Cochrane analysis (updated 2007)
  • Patients over 18years only
  • 53 trials 3836 patients.
  • Reduced risk of exposure to allogenic blood by
    39 (RR 0.61, 95 CI 0.54 to 0.70)
  • 29 trials 2488 patients in cardiac surgery
  • Reduced risk of exposure by 31 (RR 0.69, 95 CI
    0.60 to 0.79
  • 17 trials reported post operative blood loss,
    mean reduction 263mls/kg
  • there is no need for further placebo controlled
    trials of lysine analogues in cardiac surgery

9
Efficacy
10
Efficacy
  • Meta analysis efficacy of tranexamic acid during
    major paediatric surgery.
  • In cardiac surgery tranexamic acid reduced blood
    loss by a mean of 11ml/kg.
  • In scoliosis surgery in children/ adolescents.
    Use of tranexamic acid reduced blood loss by 682
    ml (95 CI 1149 214 ml).

11
Efficacy
  • Conclude that a large multicenter placebo
    controlled trial should be performed in children.
    powered to detect clinically important outcomes
    such as mortality, use of blood products,
    reoperation and side effects

12
Dose Finding
13
Dose finding
14
Dose Finding
  • Chauhan et al. Dose comparison of tranexamic acid
    in pediatric cardiac surgery. Asian Cardiovasc
    Thorac Ann 200412(2)121-4
  • compared 4 dosing regimes against placebo
  • single bolus of 50mg/kg
  • 10mg/kg followed by an infusion of 1mg/kg/hr
  • two doses of 20mg/kg
  • three doses of 10mg/kg.

15
Dose finding
  • The single dose regime was no better than placebo
    and significantly inferior to other regimes
  • No conclusive difference between other regimes.
  • Recommended 10mg/kg 3
  • Comparison of different dosage regimes rather
    than cumulative dose. Dosing regime more
    important than dose
  • 30 patients per group. Underpowered to detect
    small differences between regimes

16
Dose finding
  • Vacharaksa et al Tranexamic acid as a means of
    reducing the need for blood in children
    undergoing open heart surgery for congenital
    cyanotic heart disease. J Med Assoc Thai 200285
    Suppl 3S904-9.
  • Small study 67 patients
  • Two doses of 15mg/kg no better than one

17
Dose finding (adults)
  • Karski single dose of 10g (approx 150mg/kg)
    10g over 5 hours. No difference
  • Katoh 100mg.kg1 vs 100mg/kg 50mg/kg. Higher
    dose superior.
  • Armellin 230mg/kg vs 15mg/kg1mg/kg/hr. No
    difference
  • Horrow compared five dosage 2.5mg/kg
    (0.25mg/kg/hr) to 40mg/kg (4mg/kg/hr.) They
    found no advantage of dosages above 10mg/kg (with
    1mg/kg/hr),

18
Dose finding
  • Grant et al. Perioperative blood transfusion
    requirements in pediatric scoliosis surgery the
    efficacy of tranexamic Acid. J Pediatr Orthop
    200929(3)300-4
  • 10mgkg and 1mg/kg/hr vs 20mg/kg and 10mg/kg/hr
  • Nonrandomized, retrospective, poorly powered
  • Trend to reduced blood usage with higher dose

19
Dose Finding
  • Trials in adults and children largely
    inconclusive
  • Dosage schedules that maintain plasma
    concentrations appear superior to single dose
    regimes
  • Dosages mostly not designed to achieve
    predetermined plasma concentrations

20
PK of tranexamic acid
  • No PK data available in children
  • Single iv dose 1g
  • three exponential decays
  • Initially rapid, then T1/2 of 2 hours and 9-18
    hours
  • Volume of distribution is 9-12litres
  • The drug is distributed widely
  • Little protein binding
  • Eliminated unchanged in the urine
  • clearance similar to GFR
  • Prolonged in renal dysfunction

21
PK during adult CPB
  • Dowd NP Pharmacokinetics of tranexamic acid
    during cardiopulmonary bypass. Anesthesiology
    200297(2)390-9.
  • Bypass increased volume of distribution and
    reduced clearance
  • two compartment model modified for the effects of
    bypass
  • existing dosing regimes produce unreliable and
    unstable plasma activity

22
Simulation of Paediatric PK
  • NONMEM used to perform simulation (user-written
    code to allow for changes in PK estimates pre-,
    during- and post-CPB)
  • Method of TA administration stipulated as
  • Bolus Dose pre-CPB (given over 30mins)
  • Maintenance continuous infusion to begin at the
    end of bolus dose
  • A bolus dose in the pump prime
  • Target concentrations stipulated as 10mcg/ml,
    30mcg/ml and 100mcg/ml.
  • PK Parameters used to write model

23
Why 10,30,100mcg/ml
  • 10mcg/ml level able to produce 80 inhibition of
    fibrinolysis
  • 30mcg/ml possibly able to cause direct inhibition
    of plasmin and platelet inhibition. Required in
    some in vitro experiments to produce inhibition
    of fibrinolysis
  • 100mcg/ml consistent with currently used
    paediatric dosing regimes. Should produce 98
    inhibition of plasmin activation.

24
Dose regimes
25
Toxicity
  • Inhibition of fibrinolysis could theoretically
    lead to increased thrombosis
  • In fact little/ no evidence to support this
  • Most high quality data is as comparison to
    aprotinin in adults (lower risk)
  • Not associated with graft occlusion in adults
  • Not associated with early fenestration closure
    post Fontan (71 patients)
  • Possibly increased risk of thrombotic
    complications on ECMO with epsilon aminocaproic
    acid

26
Statistical Methods
  • Unlikely to be possible to identify different
    response between doses using a traditional dose
    comparison study
  • Alternative approach is PK-PD modeling
  • Robust PK model is built using established
    methods (population PK, sparse sampling theory)
  • Can be linked to response such as validated
    biomarker or clinical outcome (PD)
  • In the absence of adequate PD data dose can be
    derived to achieve plasma level consistent with
    previous in vivo or in vitro work

27
PK-PD modeling
  • Is possible to estimate an effect for dosages
    between the dosages actually studied
  • The PK modeling allows optimization of the dosing
    regime as well as total dosage.
  • Much of the variability in response to the drug
    may be due to PK variability. By mapping effect
    to plasma concentration, rather than dose, some
    of this variability is removed.
  • Depending on the robustness of the model it may
    be possible to extrapolate outside of the dosage
    range studied.
  • Depending on the robustness of the model and of
    data collection it is possible to test the impact
    of covariates on the response.

28
Genetics PAI-1
  • PAI-1 endogenous inhibitor of fibrinolysis
  • PAI-1 has been extensively investigated as risk
    factor for cardiovascular disease
  • G5/G5 polymorphism (16-23) has been implicated
    in increased fibrinolysis and bleeding and
    increased response to Tx Acid
  • G5/G5 polymorphism has been associated with lower
    levels of PAI-1
  • Has not been investigated in children

29
Fibrinolysis
30
Proposed study design
  • Patients aged 0-16 years undergoing heart surgery
    utilising cardiopulmonary bypass. Anticipated to
    involve cardiopulmonary bypass of greater than 90
    minutes duration?
  • Neonates (defined as any patient aged less than
    50 weeks post conceptual age). ngt40 to establish
    PK in neonates
  • Patients undergoing a repeat Stenotomy
  • Patients with cyanotic heart disease and baseline
    saturations less than 83 or baseline haematocrit
    greater than 55

31
Study Design
  • 50 patients in each dosage group (total 200)
  • Placebo and three dosage regimes
  • Based on power to establish efficacy
  • Stratified to hospital and neonates

32
Dose regimes
33
Primary outcome
  • Chest drain loss (as recorded on ICU charts by
    bedside nurse) between the 2nd and 12th
    postoperative hour.

34
Important Secondary Outcomes
  • Total Allogenic Red Cell Usage during five day
    period from day of surgery (d0 d5)
  • Evidence of life endangering bleeding
  • Red cell replacement in theatre post bypass
    (including autologous blood) of gt50 estimated
    blood volume
  • Chest drain loss in ICU of gt50 blood volume in
    first 12 hours
  • Re-exploration for bleeding
  • Diagnosis of tamponade within 24 hours of end of
    surgery (haemodynamically and/or
    echocardiographically)
  • Use of rFVIIa

35
Other Secondary clinical outcomes related to
efficacy
  • Total use of allogenic platelets (in five days
    from surgery)
  • Total use of allogenic FFP (in five days from
    surgery)
  • Total use of allogenic cryoprecipitate (in five
    days from surgery)
  • Total use of rFVIIa
  • ?Time to chest closure after completed protamine
    administration

36
Hematological Markers
37
Other clinical data including evidence toxicity
  • Taken from clinical records and clinically
    indicated tests
  • Major negative post operative sequelae during
    hospital admission
  • Death within 30 days
  • Mechanical circulatory or respiratory support
  • New episode of renal failure requiring dialysis
  • New focal neurological deficit
  • New seizures
  • Thrombotic event including shunt occlusion
    vascular occlusion echo evidence of intracardiac
    or extracardiac thrombosis coronary occlusion
  • Laboratory evidence of elevated creatinine

38
Summary of Blood Samples
39
Conclusion
  • Evidence of efficacy in children is weak and
    further investigation is appropriate
  • PK (PD) modeling is likely to give the best
    evidence to support dosing regimes
  • Collection of data on PAI-1 will help to explain
    response to this drug
  • This is worth doing with potential wide
    application
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com