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Thromboprophylaxis for Patients in ICU With COVID-19

I

Instituto de Investigacion Sanitaria La Fe

Status

Completed

Conditions

Thrombosis
Covid19
Anticoagulant Therapy

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04623177
RegCoVid-19

Details and patient eligibility

About

The respiratory distress that goes with COVID-19 infection has been related to a procoagulant state, with thrombosis at both venous and arterial levels, that determines hypoxia and tissue dysfunction at several organs. The main sign of this thrombotic activity seems to be the D-Dimers, that have been proposed to identify patients with poor prognosis at an early stage.

Knowledge on how to prevent or even treat this procoagulant state is scarce. COVID-19 patients may be out of general thromboprophylaxis recommendations, and recent studies suggest a better prognosis in severe COVID-19 patients receiving anticoagulant therapy with low molecular weight heparin (LMWH). However, the LMWH efficacy and safety, mainly in patients admitted to an Intensive Care Unit, remains to be validated.

Full description

Many reports have postulated a procoagulant state along with the respiratory distress caused by coronavirus SARS-CoV2. A complex physiopathology has been proposed trying to explain this profile, mainly based on the thromboinflammatory concept, with thrombosis at both venous and arterial levels. Microvascular thrombi impair the blood flow all over the body, with a vascular shunt due to capillary obstruction, that determines hypoxia and tissue dysfunction at several organs, being the lung the more affected one.

Although D-Dimers (DD) are not specific indicators of clot formation, its elevation, in combination with other parameters (hyperfibrinogenemia, mild thrombocytopenia) may suggest a systemic coagulation activation with an increase of thrombin generation and fibrinolysis. In fact, in a retrospective Chinese analysis, a DD higher than 1000 ng/ml was proposed to identify patients with poor prognosis at an early stage.

Nevertheless, knowledge on how to prevent or even treat this procoagulant state is scarce. Thromboprophylaxis with low molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) is recommended in most medical patients admitted to the hospital and in nearly all patients in an Intensive Care Unit (ICU). But COVID-19 patients may be out of these recommendations, and some treatment schemes has been proposed, although how to decide the suitable LMWH for each clinical situation is controversial. Recent retrospective studies suggest a better prognosis in severe COVID-19 patients receiving anticoagulant therapy with LMWH. However, the LMWH efficacy and safety, mainly in COVID-19 patients admitted to the ICU, remains to be validated.

Enrollment

822 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Confirmed SARS-CoV2 infection from a respiratory tract sample using a polymerase chain reaction assay.
  • Admitted to ICU

Exclusion criteria

  • Non-confirmed SARS-CoV2 infection
  • No data at first day ICU admission
  • Patient with do-not resuscitate orders
  • Patient who did not meet the outcomes of death or ICU discharge by the time of study completion date

Trial design

822 participants in 3 patient groups

Anticoagulation
Description:
Patients receiving an anticoagulant dose (equal or higher than 150 IU/kg/24 h) of LMWH within the first 48 hours after the ICU admission
Thromboprophylaxis
Description:
Patients receiving a prophylactic dose (lower than 150 IU/kg/24 h) of LMWH within the first 48 hours after the ICU admission
No heparin
Description:
Patients receiving no anticoagulant drug within the first 48 hours after the ICU admission

Trial contacts and locations

31

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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