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The invesigators seek to devise a strategy for the assessment of Rivaroxaban activity in trauma and Emergency General Surgery (EGS) patients available as point-of-care testing.
Thromboelastography (TEG) is a point of care, viscoelastic measurement of coagulation that is widely used in trauma and is viewed by many as superior to standard coagulation studies for the assessment of coagulopathy following injury and may be useful in detecting rivaroxaban effect in trauma and EGS patients to assess the degree of functional factor Xa impairment.
Full description
Rivaroxaban is a novel factor Xa inhibitor that is widely used for stroke prevention in nonvalvular atrial fibrillation, treatment of venous thromboembolism (VTE), and for VTE prophylaxis in patients undergoing knee or hip replacement surgery.
Current standard measurements of coagulation are relatively poor at reliably measuring detecting Rivaroxaban effects and more elaborate means of testing such as measurement of factor Xa activity are not immediately available so not useful in Urgent situations such as traumatic injury or emergent surgical indications. Due to the unmet need to devise a strategy for detecting Rivaroxaban activity in urgent situations, unnecessary reversal, which can lead to significant complications and cost, often results.
The investigators seek to devise a strategy for the assessment of Rivaroxaban activity in trauma and Emergency General Surgery (EGS) patient available as point-of-care testing.
Thromboelastography (TEG) is a point of care, viscoelastic measurement of coagulation that is widely used in trauma and is viewed by many as superior to standard coagulation studies for the assessment of coagulopathy following injury and may be useful in detecting Rivaroxaban effect in trauma and EGS patients to assess the degree of functional factor Xa impairment.
This proposed study is a observational, prospective, cross sectional, study evaluating the Pharmacokinetics of rivaroxaban utilization thromboelastography (TEG) in a population of 80 trauma and emergency EGS patients who were taking rivaroxaban prior to admission and 20 active control trauma and EGS patients who were not taking rivaroxaban prior to admission (matched by age gender injury mechanism or illness)
Study activities:
Prior to any resuscitation with blood, blood products, or reversal agents, the investigators will obtain a TEG as well as standard coagulation testing: prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time,international normalized ratio (PT/PTT/INR). TEG and coagulation studies will be obtained as soon as possible on admission and again following reversal of rivaroxaban (if reversed as SOC) or at 24 hours post admission to assess for changes.
To assess the efficacy of TEG in monitoring Rivaroxaban activity, the investigators will also perform a battery of coagulation tests at the same timepoints described above in order to attempt to assess the degree of functional factor X inhibition. The coagulation battery will include: thrombin time, thrombin generation, PT with neoplastine, ecarin chromogenic assay, as well as the anti-factor Xa chromogenic assay (Rivaroxaban assay) run by our Institute for Transfusion Medicine.
TEG will be compared to these additional coagulation assays to determine whether prolongation of R time (the most sensitive measurement of coagulation factor activity) and other TEG parameters can be utilized as reliable measurements of Rivaroxaban activity. Each of these tests will be performed at the two aforementioned timepoints: admission and post reversal or 24 hours post admission if clinical team does not opt to reverse patent.
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100 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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