Literature DB >> 15673408

Pharmacologic C5-complement suppression reduces blood loss during on-pump cardiac surgery.

John C Chen1, Scott A Rollins, Stanton K Shernan, Steven Boyce, Keith Allen, Arthur Wallace, Kevin J Malloy, Jamie S Eng, Robert W Colman, Jane C K Fitch.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Inflammation contributes to morbidity following on-pump cardiac surgery. Complement activation during cardiopulmonary bypass has been associated with the postoperative bleeding and tissue injury. This study examines the pharmacology and impact on blood loss of complement C5 suppression with pexelizumab in patients undergoing cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass.
METHODS: Pexelizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody single-chain fragment that binds to the human C5 complement component, was studied in a Phase II multicentered clinical trial. CABG (n = 800) and CABG with concomitant valve surgery (n = 114) patients were evaluated. Patients were randomized to either: pexelizumab bolus (2.0 mg/kg) + placebo infusion; pexelizumab bolus (2.0 mg/kg) + pexelizumab infusion (0.05 mg/kg/hour for 24 hours); or placebo bolus + placebo infusion. Pharmacology, chest tube drainage, and transfusion requirements were assessed.
RESULTS: Mean maximum pexelizumab serum concentration was similar for bolus and bolus + infusion-treated patients. Complement-dependent serum hemolytic activity was completely suppressed within 1 hour following pexelizumab bolus, however, suppression was maintained for a longer duration in the bolus + infusion compared to the bolus-only treated patients. A reduction in chest tube drainage was observed for all pexelizumab-treated patients, although transfusion of blood products was similar across all study groups.
CONCLUSION: Pexelizumab administration inhibits complement-dependent hemolytic activity and is associated with a reduction in postoperative chest tube drainage in patients undergoing cardiac surgery requiring cardiopulmonary bypass. Further, clinical studies are needed to assess the value of complement attenuation in this setting.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15673408     DOI: 10.1111/j.0886-0440.2005.200370.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Card Surg        ISSN: 0886-0440            Impact factor:   1.620


  2 in total

1.  Complement activation during cardiopulmonary bypass and association with clinical outcomes.

Authors:  Rengina Kefalogianni; Farah Kamani; Mihaela Gaspar; T C Aw; Jackie Donovan; Mike Laffan; Matthew C Pickering; Deepa J Arachchillage
Journal:  EJHaem       Date:  2022-01-13

2.  Factors associated with excessive bleeding in cardiopulmonary bypass patients: a nested case-control study.

Authors:  Juan J Jimenez Rivera; Jose L Iribarren; Jose M Raya; Ibrahim Nassar; Leonardo Lorente; Rosalia Perez; Maitane Brouard; Jose M Lorenzo; Pilar Garrido; Ysamar Barrios; Maribel Diaz; Blas Alarco; Rafael Martinez; Maria L Mora
Journal:  J Cardiothorac Surg       Date:  2007-04-10       Impact factor: 1.637

  2 in total

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