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The goal is to investigate whether blood samples drawn from a central venous catheter can provide reliable measurements of unfractionated heparin (UFH) anti-Xa activity, compared to the standard method of peripheral vein puncture, in intensive care unit (ICU) patients receiving continuous intravenous UFH.
To evaluate the reliability of central venous blood sampling, the study will compare anti-Xa activity levels obtained simultaneously from two different types of blood draws: one from a peripheral vein (reference method), and the other from the central line using one of two flushing techniques.
The two central flushing techniques being studied are:
Each patient will undergo four pairs of simultaneous blood draws, using both central techniques in a randomized sequence. The main objective is to assess whether the anti-Xa levels from central samples are equivalent to those from peripheral vein puncture, with a predefined margin of equivalence of ±0.05 IU/mL.
Findings from this study may support the use of central venous catheters for routine anti-Xa monitoring in ICU patients, potentially avoiding painful or technically difficult peripheral vein punctures.
Full description
Unfractionated heparin (UFH) is widely used in intensive care units (ICUs) and requires close monitoring, most commonly through the measurement of anti-Xa activity.
The reference method for anti-Xa monitoring involves blood sampling by peripheral vascular puncture. However, in ICU patients, peripheral access may be challenging or painful, and central venous catheters are often available and already used for UFH infusion. Sampling from these central lines could be a convenient alternative, but residual heparin in the catheter may contaminate the sample, leading to falsely elevated anti-Xa results.
The CASSANDRA study (Central catheter Anti-Xa Sampling Study for Accurate aNalysis and Reliable Dosage Assessment) is a prospective, monocentric, comparative study designed to assess whether anti-Xa activity levels obtained from central venous catheter samples are equivalent to those from peripheral vein samples.
To be eligible for inclusion, patients must already have a central venous catheter in place and require continuous intravenous unfractionated heparin administration through the distal lumen of the central venous catheter.
A three-way stopcock will be placed upstream of the infusion tubing to allow temporary interruption of UFH infusion during sampling.
Two catheter flushing techniques will be compared:
For each patient, four pairs of simultaneous blood samples will be collected, according to a randomized sequence alternating between methods A and B. In each pair, one sample will be drawn from the central venous catheter and the other from a fresh peripheral vein puncture (reference). All anti-Xa assays will be performed, but only the results from peripheral vein samples (reference method) will be made available to clinicians. Anti-Xa results from central venous catheter samples will remain blinded to the clinical team to avoid influencing patient management.
The primary outcome is the absolute difference in anti-Xa activity between central venous catheter samples (either method) and peripheral samples. Equivalence is defined as a mean difference not exceeding 0.05 IU/mL. Secondary outcomes include Bland-Altman agreement limits between each central method and the peripheral reference.
Results of this study may support the safe use of central venous sampling for routine anti-Xa monitoring in ICU patients, provided an appropriate flushing method is used.
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30 participants in 4 patient groups
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Gregoire MULLER, Dr
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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