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Hemodialysis is a procedure that kidney physicians perform when the kidneys fail and can no longer clean the blood and remove extra fluid and toxins from the body. Hemodialysis therefore requires access to reach the blood through either a surgically created permanent fistula or graft or through the insertion of a temporary catheter in one of the large body veins. While the use of fistulas or grafts is preferred because they are permanent, there may be conditions that prevent patients from having them and a hemodialysis catheter may be used instead. The problem with the use of catheters however is that they can become blocked due to the formation of blood clots. Kidney physicians try to resolve occlusion of hemodialysis catheters by injecting a medication called Alteplase which breaks the clot at the catheter site. There is no consensus in the medical community as to how much of the medication should be injected at the occluded catheter site. While some kidney physicians and studies recommend the use of 1.0 mg of the medication at each occlusion site, others recommend that 2.0 mg of the medication should be used. Thus, the purpose of this randomized clinical trial is to compare the effectiveness of 1.0mg versus 2.0mg dose of alteplase in resolving blood clots in hemodialysis catheters.
The investigators will recruit patients for the study from a regional hemodialysis unit that is located in southwestern Ontario. Patients who agree to participate in this research and experiences occlusion of their hemodialysis catheters will be divided into two groups; making sure that this division is completely by chance. The first group will receive 1.0mg alteplase, while the second will receive 2.0mg Alteplase. The investigators will collect information on both groups and will run statistical analysis of these information to compare the results of clot resolution between the groups.
Full description
Objectives The primary purpose of this study is to examine the effectiveness of tPA 2.0 mg as compared to 1.0 mg in restoring hemodialysis catheter (HDC) function after blood occlusion.
Specifically, the study aims to:
Hypotheses
Methods and Materials
A double blind, randomized, controlled clinical trial will be conducted on consenting hemodialysis patients who will require tPA management of their HDC dysfunction. All patients will be recruited from a regional out-patient HD unit in southwestern Ontario. Eligible HD patients will be approached with verbal and written explanation about the research, and will be invited to sign a written consent to participate in the study. All consenting patients will be randomly assigned to either of the two study groups, based on allocation concealment principles, immediately after they experience HDC occlusion due to a blood clot. Patient recruitment will continue until a minimum sample of 75 participants per group is achieved, to provide a total minimum sample of 150 participants.
Recruitment Protocol All study participants will be recruited from the out-patient HD unit at our region, which provides HD services to an average of 250 patients at any given year. Prior to the initiation of the study, the research team will hold an information session to orient the staff at the HD unit to the study protocol. All HD patients who attend our regional unit will be approached with information about the study, its purpose and protocol, and will be asked to provide voluntary written consent to participate in the study. Consents will be sought from all prospective participants before an HDC occlusion takes place. Once an HDC occlusion is reported and the patient is deemed by the nurse to be eligible for tPA management according to the guidelines of the Medical Directive for tPA administration, the patient will be allocated to either of the study groups by a research assistant. Patient allocation will be performed based on a predetermined concealed random sequence to ensure that neither the patient nor members of the research team are aware of the patient random allocation to either of the study groups. To ensure that the two groups have an equal number of participants, block randomization approach with five participants per block will be implemented. In order to enhance the allocation concealment process, the random codes will be generated by a colleague who is not a member of the research team using a computer program. Each random allocation code will be kept according to the order of its sequence in an oblique envelope at a locked cabinet in the HD unit.
Data Collection and tPA Administration Protocols Once allocated to a treatment group, the patient will be blindly given the treatment according to the medical directive of the HD unit for the administration of tPA for the management of HDC occlusion. To ensure blinding of treatment, the two groups will be coded as "A" and "B" and these codes will only be known to the pharmacist (not involved with the study) who will pre-fill the tPA syringes and label them accordingly. Thus, the pharmacist will prepare all 1.0mg and the 2.0mg doses in 2.0ml syringes; whereby the 1.0mg dose will be prepared in a concentration of 1.0mg/2.0ml, while the 2.0mg dose will be prepared in a concentration of 2.0mg/2.0ml. The varying syringe concentrations will ensure that both doses are identical to ensure the blinding of the two study groups. Once ready to administer the tPA according to the medical directive, the HD nurse will instill the prefilled tPA solution into the occluded HDC lumen and allow it to dwell in the lumen for 30 minutes. The HD nurse will then withdraw 3.0 ml of blood from the occluded lumen and assess for patency. If there is a backflow and the HDC is deemed patent, the HD nurse will recommence HD. If the HDC lumen is not patent after the first instill, the HD nurse may repeat the tPA administration procedure up to a maximum of a total of three times before a referral for therapeutic radiology is arranged to strip the catheter. Data on the total number of repeats, the outcome of each repeat, and the outcome of the radiology will be collected. The nurse initiating the tPA medical directive will document the administration of tPA in the patient medication record according to their volume (i.e., 2ml pre-filled dose). He/she will also communicate the procedure to the Research Assistant for the study on a separate log book that will be kept at the nurses' station of the HD unit. The Research Assistant will review the log book on regular basis to collect data on the tPA administration procedure, demographic information, prognostic factors, participants' relevant medications and blood labs, and medical history. Patients will be followed up after tPA management until he/she reaches the study endpoint.
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Inclusion criteria
A patient will be deemed eligible for inclusion in the study if he/she:
In addition, only the first occlusion event that requires tPA administration for a single catheter will be included. However, each new catheter insertion for the same patient during the study will be treated as a new event. That is, a single patient may be randomized more than one time if he/she experiences the insertion of more than one catheter during the course of the study
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
150 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Maher M El-Masri, PhD; Albert Kadri, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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