ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

HEmoFiltration With Citric Acid Anticoagulation (HEFCAA)

M

Medical University of Gdansk

Status

Completed

Conditions

Acute Kidney Failure
Renal Replacement Therapy
Acute Kidney Injury
Hemofiltration

Treatments

Procedure: Hemofiltration with regional citrate anticoagulation

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03836742
NKBBN/539/2016-17

Details and patient eligibility

About

Prospective observational study of all consecutive cardio-vascular surgical patients treated with post-dilution hemofiltration with regional citrate anticoagulation as first-choice anticoagulation method. The filter life-span was assessed in the context of postoperative cardiac surgical antithrombotic prophylaxis. Reasons for termination of hemofiltration sessions were assessed. The second aim of this study was to assess the influence ACD-A based anticoagulation protocol on acid-base and ion homeostasis in cardiac surgical patients with acute renal failure.

Full description

All consecutive cardio-vascular surgery patients treated with post-dilution hemofiltration with regional citrate anticoagulation (HF RCA) from August 2015 through November 2017 were included to prospective audit. Indication to hemofiltration treatment was based on clinical assessment of patients renal function and clinical status by attending physician and conformed conventional indications to renal replacement therapy (RRT) in intensive care unit (ICU). Severe chronic liver disease or acute liver injury with INR > 2 and refractory shock with lactate increasing above 8 mmol/L were considered as contraindication to RCA.

Initially set blood flow was 5 times higher than filtrate flow, which makes filtration fraction of 20%. To reduce the risk of metabolic alkalosis, ACD-A citrate solution was proposed instead of most commonly used trisodium citrate solution, and relatively low target citrate concentration (2.8 mmol/L) was adopted. In case of pH increase above 7.5 or bicarbonate concentration above 40 mmol/L filtrate flow was decreased from initial 35 ml/kg/hour down to 25 ml/kg/hour which should reduce bicarbonate synthesis by 25%. If metabolic alkalosis persisted, the second step involved reduction of blood flow from initial 5 times down to 4 times filtrate flow, which reduced citrate flow by the same factor.

In order to avoid hypomagnesemia resulting from magnesium binding to citrate, and its removal with ultrafiltrate not balanced with magnesium content in replacement fluid, the original protocol was modified by connecting magnesium sulfate solution 2g/50 ml 0.9% NaCl at the flow 1 mL/hour.

All sessions stopped due to patients death before 48 hours of HF treatment were excluded from the analysis. Similarly, all cases where hemofiltration session was stopped before 48 hours of treatment due to organizational reasons, recovery of renal function, change of therapy, and when patients were treated with heparin infusion due to surgical indications were excluded from further circuit survival analysis.

Blood gas parameters together with pH, bicarbonate concentration, Na, Cl, K, Ca, hemoglobin concentration, hematocrit, lactate, and anion gap were analyzed every 6 hours. Post filter ionized calcium concentration was not assessed. Serum phosphate, magnesium and total calcium was assessed every 24 hours during hemofiltration treatment with RCA.

Enrollment

54 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 90 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • cardiac and vascular surgery patients treated with continuous hemofiltration with regional citrate anticoagulation

Exclusion criteria

  • severe chronic liver disease, acute liver injury with INR > 2, and refractory shock with lactate increasing above 8 mmol/L

Trial design

54 participants in 1 patient group

HF RCA
Description:
Cardiovascular surgery patients treated with hemofiltration with regional citrate anticoagulation
Treatment:
Procedure: Hemofiltration with regional citrate anticoagulation

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems