A cystectomy is the removal of the bladder and adjacent organs in patients with bladder cancer. This often results in significant blood loss, and about 60% of patients will require a blood transfusion during or up to 30 days after surgery. Significant blood loss may result in cardiovascular morbidity, and the use of blood products are expensive and expose patients to risk. Tranexamic acid reduces breakdown of hemostatic blood clots and it has therapeutic benefit when used in other surgical procedures to reduce blood loss and the need for transfusion. The current study will be the first to evaluate whether tranexamic acid is effective and safe to use during radical cystectomy. The results of the study will have an immediate impact on patient care.
Removal of the bladder and adjacent organs in patients with bladder cancer (radical cystectomy) often results in significant blood loss, and approximately 60% of patients require peri-operative blood transfusion. Reducing blood loss and the frequency of transfusion offers several benefits, including donor blood conservation, health care cost reduction, and avoidance of blood product exposure. Tranexamic acid is an amino acid lysine derivative with strong antifibrinolytic clotting properties that can be administered systemically. This medication has been used in a variety of operative procedures, notably in high risk cardiac surgery, to decrease peri-operative blood loss, and it is associated with an acceptable risk of adverse events. Systemic anti-hemorrhagics are infrequently used during radical cystectomy, and to the investigators knowledge their effects have not been evaluated in a clinical trial. Overall objective: To conduct a randomized controlled trial of systemic tranexamic acid compared to placebo in reducing the number of blood transfusions in patients undergoing radical cystectomy for bladder cancer. Design: A multi-center, randomized, double-blinded, placebo controlled trial. Study population: Consenting patients 18 years of age and older undergoing a radical cystectomy for bladder cancer, excluding those who: are unwilling to receive blood products due to personal reasons, are pregnant, have active angina, have a known allergy to tranexamic acid, or have a known personal history of deep venous thrombosis, atrial fibrillation, coronary stent, sub-arachnoid hemorrhage, pulmonary embolism, thrombotic stroke and / or acquired disturbance of colour vision. The study will recruit 354 patients from Dalhousie University, McGill University, Université de Montreal, Université Laval, University of Ottawa, University of Western Ontario and University of Alberta. Intervention: Tranexamic Acid arm: Tranexamic acid will be administered as an intravenous infusion of 10 mg/kg within 10 minutes (loading dose) and before surgical incision, followed by 5 mg/kg/hour continuous maintenance infusion for the length of surgery (typically 4 to 8 hours). For example, an 80 kg patient would receive 800 mg prior to incision and a 400 mg/hour infusion for the duration of surgery. For a 6 hour procedure, the total dose administered would be 3200 mg. Placebo arm: As there is no standard of care concerning administration of antifibrinolytic agents in cystectomy procedures, controls will follow the same dosing and schedule described above, but with 0.9% saline infusion. Outcomes: The primary research objective is whether the use of systemic tranexamic acid compared to placebo reduces the proportion of radical cystectomy patients requiring red blood cell transfusion up to 30 days post-operative (from a 50% transfusion rate with placebo to 35% with tranexamic acid). Secondary questions are: Will use of systemic tranexamic acid compared to placebo result in reductions in: i) intraoperative blood loss, ii) amounts of transfused blood products, and iii) post-operative complications? The safety (thrombotic events) of tranexamic acid will also be evaluated. Importance of this study: If tranexamic acid reduces the number of blood transfusions, there will be an immediate impact to cystectomy patients, and surgeons may consider the routine use of systemic tranexamic acid during similar abdomino-pelvic procedures associated with significant blood loss.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
354
Tranexamic acid will be administered as an intravenous infusion of 10 mg/kg over 10 minutes (loading dose) prior to surgical incision, followed by 5 mg/kg/hour continuous maintenance infusion for the length of surgery (typically 4 to 8 hours).
As there is no standard of care concerning administration of anti-fibrinolytic agents in cystectomy procedures, controls will follow the same dosing and schedule as above (loading dose followed by maintenance infusion), but with 0.9% sodium chloride.
Northern Alberta Urology Centre
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
St. Boniface General Hospital
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
London Health Sciences Complex (LHSC)
London, Ontario, Canada
The Ottawa Hospital
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
University Health Network
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
McGill University Health Centre (MUHC)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Centre Hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal (CHUM)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Centre Hospitalier de l'Université de Québec (CHUQ)
Québec, Canada
proportion of patients transfused at least one unit of packed red blood cell transfusion
Time frame: up to 30 days post-operative
total units of red blood cells transfused
Time frame: up to 30 days post-operative
occurrence of postoperative bleeding requiring intervention
intervention noted as reoperation or angioinfarction
Time frame: up to 30 days post-operative
occurrence of platelet transfusion
Time frame: up to 30 days post-operative
total units of platelets transfused
Time frame: up to 30 days post-operative
occurrence of plasma transfusion
Time frame: up to 30 days post-operative
total units of plasma transfused
Time frame: up to 30 days post-operative
estimated intra-operative blood loss
Time frame: up to 30 days post-operative
change in hemoglobin
Time frame: up to 30 days post-operative
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