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A large multicenter randomized controlled trial of approximately 1700 critically ill patients' status post complex cardiac surgery with sternotomy, called the Red Cell Storage Duration Study (RECESS), is currently ongoing. In the RECESS trial, study groups are randomized to either RBCs of less than or equal to 10 days storage time or to greater than or equal to 21 days. The primary outcome of RECESS is a change in multiple organ dysfunction score. Secondary outcomes in RECESS include all cause 28-day mortality, mechanical ventilation free days, and other clinical outcomes. The RECESS study presents a unique opportunity to investigate mechanisms associated with RBC storage duration in the context of clinical outcomes for well-characterized surgical study groups. The ancillary study described here is called the Mechanism and Repository Study (MARS) for RECESS.
The MARS study will analyze the most commonly reported and hypothesized mechanisms considered to be associated with the RBC storage lesion and adverse outcomes in critically ill patients. Laboratories with expertise in RBC function, nitric oxide mechanisms, the coagulation cascade, microparticle analysis and immunology will each examine hypotheses addressing mechanisms potentially able to relate storage time to clinical outcomes in RBC transfusion recipients. At the conclusion of the study, the results will provide a much better understanding of how RBC storage age affects recipient RBC function, coagulation parameters, microparticle load and immune modulation. Perhaps most importantly, this study will also develop a large sample repository for future analysis.
Full description
MARS will enroll approximately 250 of the subjects participating in the RECESS study, and an additional 50 healthy volunteers. The RECESS subjects participating in MARS will have blood drawn before their cardiac surgery, and again 2 days after their cardiac surgery. If they have received any red blood cell (RBC) transfusions during their surgery or in the 96 hours following the end of their surgery, they will also have blood drawn at approximately 6 days, 28 days, and 180 days after their surgery, and will answer a health questionnaire at the 28-day and 180-day visits. The healthy volunteers participating in MARS will each have a single blood draw.
All MARS subjects will have blood samples sent to a repository for future study. A subset of the RECESS subjects participating in MARS, and all the healthy volunteers participating in MARS, will also have a number of laboratory tests performed as part of the MARS study. These tests will include
At one hospital, samples from RBC units transfused to MARS subjects will also be analyzed for nitric oxide parameters.
The primary objective of MARS is to compare post-operative values of these laboratory parameters between RBC-transfused RECESS subjects randomized to receive RBCs stored 10 days or less and RBC-transfused RECESS subjects randomized to receive RBCs stored 21 days or more.
Secondary objectives include
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria for RECESS subjects participating in MARS:
Exclusion Criteria for RECESS subjects participating in MARS:
Inclusion Criteria for healthy volunteers participating in MARS:
Exclusion Criteria for healthy volunteers participating in MARS:
92 participants in 4 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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