This is a study to investigate if eltrombopag can be used instead of Intravenous Immune Globulin (IVIG) in patients with ITP, to adequately raise their platelet count when they undergo minor or major surgery. Eltrombopag is a daily, oral pill approved for treatment of ITP. IVIG is a blood product frequently used to treat ITP. Patients with ITP who need surgery have to get treatment to increase their platelet count. IVIG is commonly used for this purpose but eltrombopag may be more effective and convenient for patients.
Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is a heterogeneous autoimmune disease characterized by the presence of platelet autoantibodies, low platelet counts and an increased risk of bleeding. TPO receptor agonists which stimulate platelet production have been shown to be remarkably effective in ITP. Their use as a short-term means of elevating platelet counts in preparation for surgical procedures has not yet been adequately evaluated. Many patients with moderate to severe ITP (platelet count less than 50 x 10exp9/L) have stable platelet counts and do not bleed; however, when surgeries or invasive procedures become necessary, additional treatment is often required to increase the platelet count to achieve adequate hemostasis. Although specific guidelines for surgical platelet count thresholds in ITP are lacking, platelet transfusion guidelines recommend a platelet count of 50 - 100 x10exp9/L for the vast majority of surgical procedure; 50x10exp9/L is a typical threshold for minor surgeries like tooth extractions and endoscopies; and 100x10exp9/L is used for major surgery like cardiac surgery or neurosurgery. Commonly, intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) is used to rapidly increase platelet counts in ITP patients before an invasive procedure. IVIG is associated with a transient platelet count response in approximately 80% of patients, which occurs within 2 - 4 days. In most patients, platelet counts remain elevated for approximately 4 weeks, allowing enough time to complete the procedure and for adequate post-operative hemostasis. However, IVIG is a resource-intensive and expensive blood product associated with frequent side effects. Eltrombopag is a small molecule, non-peptide thrombopoietin (TPO) receptor agonist indicated for the treatment of thrombocytopenia in patients with chronic ITP who have had an insufficient response to corticosteroids, immunoglobulins, or splenectomy. TPO receptor agonists are an effective new class of medications that are non-immunogenic agonists of the TPO receptor (c-Mpl) and work by increasing platelet production in ITP patients. In randomized controlled trials, eltrombopag maintenance therapy has been shown to raise the platelet count in 60 - 80% of ITP patients and platelet counts generally remain elevated as long as the drug is continued. Time to response is 1 - 2 weeks with minimal need for dose titration. Side effects of eltrombopag observed in clinical studies included elevation of liver enzymes (approximately 10% of patients). The risk of thrombosis and bone marrow reticulin formation remain uncertain. The investigators propose a randomized controlled trial (RCT) involving 74 patients (across approximately 8 centers) in Canada. This study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of eltrombopag bridging therapy compared with IVIG bridging therapy in adult patients with ITP who require surgery. This study will also evaluate bleeding, adverse events and patient-reported treatment satisfaction using the Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medication (TSQM). Patients will be stratified according to centre and surgery type (major vs. minor).
Participants are started on 50mg daily oral pill (or 25mg daily for patients of East Asian descent) 21 days before surgery. Dose may be adjusted based on subsequent platelet counts (minimum 25mg; maximum 75mg).
IVIG infusion (1-2 g/kg) given 7 (+/-2) days prior to surgery; with an additional infusion allowed within one week of achievement of surgical hemostasis, if needed
University of Alberta Hospital
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Vancouver General Hospital
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Hamilton Health Sciences
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
London Health Sciences Center
Achievement of a platelet count level that is above the platelet count threshold for surgery preoperatively and that is maintained above the threshold during the post-hemostasis period without the use of rescue treatment
Threshold is a platelet count of 50 x 10\^9/L for minor surgery and 100 x 10\^9/L for major surgery.
Time frame: For a the period of time from the final pre-operative visit until 7 days after surgical hemostasis is achieved
Time to treatment failure
Time to the occurrence of a platelet count level below the designated threshold, or the administration of rescue treatment
Time frame: During the period from the final pre-operative visit until 7 days after surgical hemostasis is achieved
Surgical delays or cancellations
Proportion of patients with surgical delays or cancellations
Time frame: Measured at time of planned surgery
Bleeding
Graded as per the ITP bleeding score
Time frame: During treatment and follow up (on average, 8 weeks from starting treatment)
Thrombocytosis
Platelet count \>400 x 10\^9/L
Time frame: During treatment and follow up (on average, 8 weeks from starting treatment)
Blood product transfusions
Proportion of patients requiring platelet, red blood cells and plasma transfusions
Time frame: During treatment and follow up (on average, 8 weeks from starting treatment)
Rescue treatment
New ITP treatment (typically platelet transfusions, high dose IVIG or high dose corticosteroids) or an increased dose of existing ITP treatment administered to increase platelet counts above threshold
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Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
74
London, Ontario, Canada
Ottawa Hospital
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Sunnybrook Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
St.Micheal's Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Hopital Maisonneuve-Rosemont
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Jewish General Hospital
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
The Haga Hospital
The Hague, Netherlands
Time frame: During the period from the final pre-operative visit until 7 days after surgical hemostasis is achieved
Platelet count change over time
Trend of all platelet count measurements in the trial
Time frame: During treatment and follow up (on average, 8 weeks from starting treatment)
Patient satisfaction with treatment
Assessed using the Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medications Score vII (which incorporates effectiveness, convenience, side effects, and overall satisfaction)
Time frame: Immediately before surgery (final pre-op visit) and 7 days (+/- 2 days) after surgical hemostasis is achieved
Hospitalizations
Unanticipated admissions to hospital or prolongation of hospitalization
Time frame: During treatment and follow up (on average, 8 weeks from starting treatment)
Thrombosis
Symptomatic thrombotic events confirmed with diagnostic imaging
Time frame: During treatment and follow up (on average, 8 weeks from starting treatment)
Adverse Events
Defined using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events v3.0
Time frame: During treatment and follow up (on average, 8 weeks from starting treatment)