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Selective Early Medical Treatment of Patent Ductus Arteriosus in Extremely Low Gestational Age Infants: A Pilot RCT (SMART-PDA)

I

IWK Health Centre

Status and phase

Enrolling
Phase 3

Conditions

Patent Ductus Arteriosus After Premature Birth

Treatments

Drug: Ibuprofen

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Background: Among preterm infants, those born at a gestational age less than 26 weeks are considered the most vulnerable with a high risk of short- and long-term health problems that include chronic lung disease, brain bleeds, gut injury, kidney failure and death. Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) is the most common heart condition with almost 70% preterm infants in this gestational age group being diagnosed with a PDA. Though many PDAs spontaneously resolve on their own, research suggests that if the PDA persists, it may contribute to a number of these short- and long-term health problems. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medications such as ibuprofen are commonly used to treat a PDA. Such drugs can also have harmful effects on the gut and kidneys of extremely preterm infants. Therefore, we are unsure if early treatment of a symptomatic PDA in this age group is at all beneficial. Given the wide variation in PDA treatment approaches in this age group, a randomized trial design, where extremely preterm infants with a symptomatic PDA are randomly assigned to early treatment or no early treatment, is essential to address this question.

Purpose of the study: The overall purpose of this pilot study is to assess the feasibility of conducting a large study to explore the following research question: In preterm infants born <26 weeks' gestation, is a strategy of selective early medical treatment of a symptomatic PDA better than no treatment at all in the first week of life?

The main feasibility objectives of this study are:

  1. To assess how many eligible infants can be enrolled in the study
  2. To assess how many enrolled infants properly complete the study protocol

Importance: To our knowledge this will be the first study on PDA management in preterm infants that specifically aims to enroll preterm infants born at <26 weeks of gestational age who are at the highest risk for PDA-related problems but have been mostly under-represented in previous PDA studies.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

Under 72 hours old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Preterm infants less than 26 completed weeks (i.e., up to and including 25 weeks and 6 days) of gestation

Exclusion criteria

  • no PDA on initial screening echocardiography
  • congenital heart disease (excluding patent foramen ovale, atrial septal defect or ventricular septal defect with a defect size less than 2mm)
  • other major congenital anomaly
  • decision to withhold/withdraw care

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

100 participants in 2 patient groups

Selective early medical treatment (SMART) strategy
Experimental group
Description:
Infants who are randomized to experimental group will follow the SMART treatment protocol, which includes echocardiographic screening every 72 hours to categorize PDA disease severity by combining clinical and echocardiographic features. At any evaluation if patients are found to have a "severe PDA" on echocardiography, irrespective of clinical symptoms, or a "moderate PDA" on echocardiography with at least moderate clinical illness, they will receive pharmacotherapy aimed at PDA closure (The PDA severity has been divided into mild, moderate or severe based on pre-defined clinical and echocardiographic criteria).
Treatment:
Drug: Ibuprofen
Early conservative management strategy
No Intervention group
Description:
Infants randomized to this arm will not undergo any further echocardiographic assessment or pharmacological treatment of the PDA regardless of the clinical signs. If the infant gets an echocardiographic assessment for a reason different than PDA assessment (such as hypotension or oxygenation failure) and a PDA is incidentally noted that fits the treatment criteria, the infant will not be initiated on pharmacotherapy. After 7 days of age, decision on PDA assessment and treatment will be at the discretion of the treating physician.

Trial contacts and locations

9

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Central trial contact

Amish Jain, MBBS, PhD; Souvik Mitra, MD, MSc

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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