| Literature DB >> 34857585 |
Jeremy Fabes1,2, Gareth Ambler3, Bina Shah4, Norman R Williams4, Daniel Martin5, Brian R Davidson4, Michael Spiro4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Liver transplantation is a complex operation that can provide significant improvements in quality of life and survival to the recipients. However, serious complications are common and include major haemorrhage, hypotension and renal failure. Blood transfusion and the development of acute kidney injury lead to both short-term and long-term poor patient outcomes, including an increased risk of death, graft failure, length of stay and reduced quality of life. Octreotide may reduce the incidence of renal dysfunction, perioperative haemorrhage and enhance intraoperative blood pressure. However, octreotide does have risks, including resistant bradycardia, hyperglycaemia and hypoglycaemia and QT prolongation. Hence, a randomised controlled trial of octreotide during liver transplantation is needed to determine the cost-efficacy and safety of its use; this study represents a feasibility study prior to this trial. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: We describe a multicentre, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled feasibility study of continuous infusion of octreotide during liver transplantation surgery. We will recruit 30 adult patients at two liver transplant centres. A blinded infusion during surgery will be administered in a 2:1 ratio of octreotide:placebo. The primary outcomes will determine the feasibility of this study design. These include the recruitment ratio, correct administration of blinded study intervention, adverse event rates, patient and clinician enrolment refusal and completion of data collection. Secondary outcome measures of efficacy and safety will help shape future trials by assessing potential primary outcome measures and monitoring safety end points. No formal statistical tests are planned. This manuscript represents study protocol number 1.3, dated 2 June 2021. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study has received Research Ethics Committee approval. The main study outcomes will be submitted to an open-access journal. TRIAL SPONSOR: The Joint Research Office, University College London, UK.Neither the sponsor nor the funder have any role in study design, collection, management, analysis and interpretation of data, writing of the study report or the decision to submit the report for publication. TRIAL REGISTRATION: The study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04941911) with recruitment due to start in August 2021 with anticipated completion in July 2022. CLINICAL TRIALS UNIT: Surgical and Interventional Group, Division of Surgery & Interventional Science, University College London. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: adult anaesthesia; adult intensive & critical care; hepatobiliary disease; hepatobiliary surgery; hepatology; transplant surgery
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34857585 PMCID: PMC8640665 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-055864
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
WHO trial registration data set
| Data category | Information |
| Primary registry and trial identifying number | ClinicalTrials.gov |
| Date of registration in primary registry | 28 June 2021 |
| Source(s) of monetary or material support | National Institute of Health Research |
| Primary sponsor | University College London, UK |
| Contact for public queries | MS (michaelspiro@nhs.net) |
| Contact for scientific queries | MS (michaelspiro@nhs.net) |
| Public title | A feasibility study of octreotide infusion during liver transplant |
| Scientific title | A double-blind randomised placebo-controlled feasibility study to assess the impact of octreotide infusion during liver transplantation on post-operative renal failure |
| Countries of recruitment | UK |
| Health condition(s) or problem(s) studied | Liver transplantation |
| Intervention(s) | Active comparator: intravenous octreotide acetate infusion, 100 mcg bolus with a subsequent infusion of 100 mcg per hour during surgery |
| Placebo comparator: sodium chloride 0.9% w/v | |
| Key inclusion and exclusion criteria | Ages eligible for study: ≥18 years |
| Inclusion criteria: adults aged 18 years and over undergoing primary liver transplantation of a whole or partial liver graft from a cardiac or brain dead donor | |
| Exclusion criteria: previous solid organ transplant, acute liver failure, fulminant hepatic failure, patients receiving a living donor liver graft, patients currently admitted to ICU prior to transplantation, requirement of haemodialysis or continuous veno-venous haemofiltration (CVVHF) preoperatively, known allergy or adverse reaction to octreotide, preoperative decision to use intra-operative CVVHF, a positive pregnancy test. | |
| Study type | Interventional |
| Allocation: patients will be randomised in a 2:1 ratio to either octreotide or placebo groups. Stratified randomisation of patients by source of liver graft (brain death or cardiac death). | |
| Primary purpose: feasibility | |
| Phase II | |
| Date of first enrolment | July 2021 |
| Target sample size | 30 |
| Recruitment status | Pending recruitment |
| Primary outcome(s) | Trial feasibility |
| Key secondary outcomes | Incidence of acute kidney injury |
ICU, intensive care unit; PROMs, patient recorded outcome measures.