ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Tranexamic Acid Dose and Confusion After Cardiac Surgery

NHS Foundation Trust logo

NHS Foundation Trust

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Cardiovascular Surgery

Treatments

Drug: Tranexamic acid

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05966012
IRAS 323740

Details and patient eligibility

About

Delirium is one of the most common complications after cardiac surgery and occurs with an incidence of 3 - 70%.

Both predisposing factors (age, diabetes, severity of cardiac disease, atrial fibrillation) and precipitating factors (type of surgery, duration of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) and surgery, ventilator time in ICU, highest temperature in intensive care (ICU)) are difficult to influence. Post-operative delirium is a devastating complication, leading to longer ICU and hospital stay, increased incidence of discharge to nursing facility and poorer long-term cognitive outcome.

Despite the impact this complication has on individuals, their families and healthcare resources, little is known about the causes and potential preventative measures.

It is thought that systemic inflammation compromising the integrity of the blood brain barrier is an important contributing factor. Recent data suggests that antifibrinolytics like tranexamic acid (TXA) might be able to lessen the inflammation of the nervous system caused by surgery and CPB through the inhibition of plasmin production, thereby stabilising the blood brain barrier. Worldwide, the use of TXA has become standard of care in cardiac surgery and other types of surgery with a high risk of bleeding. It has been shown to reduce bleeding by 25% and significantly reduce the rate of transfusion in cardiac and noncardiac surgery.

At Royal Papworth hospital it is routine practice to administer 2g of TXA before commencing CPB irrespective of patients' body weight. We are hypothesising that there is a weight-based effect of TXA on neurological outcomes after cardiac surgery, showing a signal that a higher dose per kg bodyweight will lead to less delirium measured with the Richmond Agitation-Sedation Score (RASS). We intend to analyse 4 years' worth of patient data (05/2018 - 08/2022); the necessary information is routinely collected on using the hospital anaesthetic and ICU record.

Full description

There will be no patient contact at any point of this retrospective analysis. The data collected will have been routinely collected on the hospital's electronic systems as part of routine clinical care and data collection.

This is a very new field of interest in cardiac anaesthesia / surgery. No clinical data is currently available apart from recent preliminary data suggesting that Tranexamic Acid (TXA) improves the inflammatory reaction the nervous system has to surgery and cardiopulmonary bypass. The first trial in this area, a RCT (TXA vs no TXA) in abdominal surgery, has only just started recruiting (Tranexamic Acid to Reduce Delirium After Gastrointestinal Surgery: the TRIGS-D Trial; clinicaltrials.gov).

The statistical methods will be determined once data distribution is known; the interdependence of primary and secondary outcome measures will be determined by multivariate regression analysis.

At this stage it is not possible to devise a prospective randomised controlled trial similar the TRIGS-D study in cardiac surgery as giving TXA is considered standard of care. It might be possible, however, to design a RCT comparing different TXA dosing regimens once the the results of this retrospective analysis are available.

Enrollment

5,000 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

All patients undergoing elective or in-house urgent cardiac surgery at RPH between 05/2018 and 08/2022

Exclusion criteria

Patients undergoing

  • operations involving deep hypothermic circulatory arrest,
  • operations involving thoracic vessels other than the ascending aorta,
  • solid organ transplantation or mechanical assist device implantation,
  • emergency operations

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems