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Efficacy & Safety of Pigtail Catheter Drainage Versus Need Based Thoracocentesis for Recurrent Hepatic Hydrothorax.

I

Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences, India

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Hepatic Hydrothorax

Treatments

Procedure: Pigtail Catheter
Procedure: Large Volume Thoracocentesis

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06007820
ILBS-Cirrhosis-60

Details and patient eligibility

About

In cirrhotic patients with recurrent hepatic hydrothorax liver transplantation is a definitive treatment. But a significant number of individual are ineligible for liver transplantation. In these patients to ameliorate the symptoms various treatment modalities such as TIPS, serial thoracocentesis, pigtail catheter drainage and pleurodesis are used. We are doing this study to assess the safety and efficacy of serial thoracocentesis verus pigtail catheter drainage.

Full description

  • Study population - Cirrhotic patients with recurrent hepatic hydrothorax
  • Study design - A prospective, randomized, single center open label study
  • Block Randomization, block size - 10
  • Sample size - Assuming in single time thoracocentesis group 5+/-3.67 thoracocentesis is required, investigator expect a 50 % reduction in pigtail drainage group. Apha error- 5, power -90, 15% dropout 35 patients in each arm
  • Intervention - Group 1 - on-demand therapeutic thoracocentensis, Group 2 - small volume frequent thoracocentesis using PCD.
  • Monitoring and assessment
  • At enrollment:

(A) Complete history and examination

  1. Etiology of cirrhosis
  2. Severity of ascites, Jaundice
  3. Prior Hepatic encephalopathy, bleed, Jaundice
  4. Prior Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, large volume paracentesis frequency
  5. Pattern and number of prior decompensation
  6. Prior Acute on Chronic Liver Failure and Acute Kidney episodes
  7. Use of non selective beta blockers, norfloxaxin, rifaximin and albumin
  8. History of Endoscopic Variceal ligation or other endotherapy
  9. History of Hypertension, Diabetes
  10. Fever , signs of sepsis (SIRS)
  11. Examination- Sarcopenia, fraility, icterus, pedal edema

At follow-up (at daily till Day - 7, thereafter at Day - 30 and Day 90) Complete history and examination

  1. Complications - SBP, SBE, ACLF and Jaundice, HE/ AKI episodes

  2. HTN, Diabetes control

  3. Fever , signs of sepsis (SIRS)

  4. Examination- Sarcopenia, fraility, icterus, pedal edema, ascites, HE Clinical Evaluation

  5. Etiology of chronic liver disease (Baseline) 2. Severity of liver disease (Baseline, Day - 7, Day - 30, Day - 90 ) 3. MELD score, MELD-Na score, CTP score (Baseline, Day - 7, Day - 30, Day - 90 ) 4. Complications (Baseline, Day - 7, Day - 30, Day - 90 ) 5. Overt HE, PHT related Bleed, clinical jaundice, ascites, hyponatremia, AKI, SBP, Infection (specify site and severity), Frequency of Large Volume Paracentesis, On Demand Thoracocentesis

  • Labs and follow up Baseline (at admission) -

    1. Blood : KFT, LFT, CBC, INR, AFP, PCT, S.PRA, Pro-BNP, Urinary Na
    2. Imaging : USG abdomen, X-ray chest, 2D ECHO
    3. Pleural fluid/ ascitic fluid - TLC, DLC, Protein, Sugar, SPAG, SAAG, ADA, c/s
    4. Hemodynamics : Intrapleural pressures at first TT
    5. Baseline (at randomization, Day -3 and Day - 7 in PCD-TT) -
    6. Blood : KFT, INR; S.PRA, Pro-BNP, Urinary Na (at Day 7)
    7. Imaging : X-ray chest
    8. Pleural fluid/ ascitic fluid - TLC, DLC, SPAG, c/s if indicated
    9. Day - 60, Day - 90 (end of follow-up)
    10. Blood : KFT, LFT, CBC, INR, AFP
    11. Imaging : USG abdomen, X-ray chest, 2D ECHO
  • STATISTICAL ANALYSIS -

    1. Data will be reported as mean + SD.
    2. Categorical variables will be compared using the chi-square test or Fisher exact test
    3. Normal continuous variables will be compared using the Student's t test
    4. Non normal continuous variables will be compared using the Mann-Whitney rank-sum test (unpaired data) or the Wilcoxon test (paired data).
    5. The actuarial probability of survival will be calculated by the Kaplan-Meier method and compared using the log-rank test.
    6. A Cox regression analysis will be performed to identify independent prognostic factors for survival.
    7. Univariate and multivariate analysis will be used whenever applicable.
  • Adverse effects - Chest pain, pain at the site, Breathlessness, infection, pneumothorax, infection, bleeding

  • Stopping rule -

    1. Liver Transplant
    2. Appearance of SBP, PICD, HE.
    3. Mortality
    4. End of follow-up

Enrollment

70 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Age 18-75 years
  2. CLD with refilling symptomatic hepatic hydrothorax

Exclusion criteria

  1. CTP >12, MELD>25
  2. Tubercular PE, Ischemic cardiac disease
  3. If opting for TIPS/ LT
  4. Severe HPS
  5. Prior or current SBE/ SBP, septic shock
  6. Patients on mechanical ventilator
  7. Serum Creatinine >2 mg/dl
  8. Extrahepatic malignancy
  9. Serum Sodium < 120
  10. Post TIPS/ BRTO/ SAE patients
  11. Post renal or liver transplantation
  12. Lack of informed consent
  13. Hepatocellular carcinoma outside milan criteria
  14. Non-cirrhotic portal HT
  15. Known HIV infection
  16. Pregnant women

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

70 participants in 2 patient groups

Large Volume Thoracocentesis
Experimental group
Description:
Group 1 - on-demand therapeutic thoracocentensis
Treatment:
Procedure: Large Volume Thoracocentesis
Pigtail Catheter
Active Comparator group
Description:
Group 2 - small volume frequent thoracocentesis using PCD
Treatment:
Procedure: Pigtail Catheter

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Dr Jaifrin Daniel, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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