Surgical hip replacement (total hip arthroplasty, THA) is associated with a high risk of venous thromboembolism, but the appropriate duration of postoperative medical thromboprophylaxis ("anticoagulation") remains highly controversial. The international randomized controlled trial (RCT) "ENhanced recovery and ABbreviated LEngth of Anticoagulation for Thromboprophylaxis after primary Hip Arthroplasty" (ENABLE-Hip) will enroll patients undergoing elective THA that are eligible for early mobilization after surgery. The trial will compare a regimen of short-duration (10-day) postoperative anticoagulation (experimental group) to standard-duration (35-day) postoperative anticoagulation (control group) using the direct oral anticoagulant Rivaroxaban (brand name: Xarelto) at the recommended dose. Thus, ENABLE-Hip will be the first major RCT to directly test an overall reduction in the duration of post-THA thromboprophylaxis instead of replacing one antithrombotic drug or regimen by another. Follow-up visits after hospital discharge will be on day 35 and on day 90 after surgery. The primary outcome is acute symptomatic proximal deep vein thrombosis, or symptomatic or fatal pulmonary embolism, within 90 days after surgery. If ENABLE-Hip will demonstrate 'non-inferiority' of the experimental intervention, its benefits will be obvious, as patients are spared many days of unnecessary (and potentially harmful in terms of bleeding risk) anticoagulation.
An increasing proportion of the ageing population in Europe and other parts of the world suffers from hip osteoarthritis and will need surgical joint arthroplasty at some time in their lives. Surgical total hip arthroplasty (THA) is associated with a high risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE), but the appropriate duration of postoperative anticoagulation remains highly controversial. Although current German guidelines continue to advocate anticoagulation for 28-35 days after THA, clinical practice recommendations in other countries are shifting towards much earlier discontinuation of anticoagulants - despite the absence of solid evidence backed by controlled data. The "Enhanced recovery and Abbreviated duration of Anticoagulation for thromboprophylaxis after primary hip Arthroplasty" (ENABLE-Hip) study is a multicentre investigator-initiated and academically sponsored prospective randomised active-control non-inferiority trial. A regimen of short-duration (10-day) prophylactic anticoagulation (experimental arm) will be compared to standard-duration (35-day) anticoagulation as per current guidelines (control arm). Patients will be mobilised early after surgery, following a standardised enhanced recovery protocol. Following randomisation and an initial two-day open-label period of prophylactic anticoagulation as per local protocol, treatment with the study drug (rivaroxaban at the standard, approved prophylactic dose of 10 mg daily) will be started and continued until 10 days after surgery. After this time, patients will be switched (in a double-blinded manner) to placebo in the experimental arm, or continue on active drug in the control arm, until a total of 35 days have elapsed since surgery. The primary outcome is acute symptomatic proximal deep vein thrombosis (DVT), or symptomatic or fatal pulmonary embolism (PE), within the first 3 months after surgery. Participating investigators will be advised to adhere to guideline recommendations regarding clinical suspicion of and diagnostic work-up for VTE. The planned study population of 2,932 patients will provide ≥ 80% power to reject the null hypothesis that δ ≥ 0.01 (where δ = difference between the two arms in symptomatic VTE probability within 3 months) and accept the alternative hypothesis that δ \< 0.01, at an overall significance level α = 0.05. A formal interim analysis will be performed after 3-month follow-up of the first 1,760 randomised patients at a significance level α = 0.50, leading to stopping for futility if significance is not obtained, or if recalculation yields an overall sample size of \> 3,200 patients. The trial has the potential to inform future national and European guidelines for this large and continuously growing patient population.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
2,932
Direct oral anticoagulant
Placebo
Kepler University Medical Center, Orthopedics and Traumatology
Linz, Upper Austria, Austria
RECRUITINGSana Clinics Sommerfeld, Dpt. for Surgical Orthopaedics
Kremmen, Brandenburg, Germany
RECRUITINGGPR Rüsselsheim Health and Care Center
Rüsselsheim am Main, Hesse, Germany
RECRUITINGUniversity Medical Center Mainz, Center for Orthopedics and Trauma Surgery
Mainz, Rhineland-Palatine, Germany
RECRUITINGUniversity Medical Center Dresden, University Center for Orthopaedics, Trauma & Plastic Surgery
Dresden, Saxony, Germany
RECRUITINGEvangelical Forest Hospital Berlin - Orthopaedics and Trauma Surgery
Berlin, Germany
RECRUITINGThe primary efficacy endpoint is the rate of acute symptomatic or fatal VTE
acute symptomatic or fatal VTE, defined as (i) symptomatic DVT of the popliteal or more proximal leg veins (femoral or iliac veins) or inferior vena cava; or (ii) symptomatic (segmental or more proximal) or fatal PE, occurring in the first 90 days after surgery and confirmed by objective testing.
Time frame: within 90 days after surgery
Length of hospital stay
duration of inpatient stay
Time frame: within 90 days after surgery
Changes in patient-reported hip joint-specific disability
assessment is made following surgery measured by the HOOS-12 score
Time frame: within 90 days after surgery
Rate of clinically relevant non-major bleedings
it does not meet the criteria for major bleeding, but results in hospitalization, aspiration of a wound, or a wound hematoma complicated by infection.
Time frame: within 90 days after surgery
Rate of death from any cause
rate of death from any cause
Time frame: within 90 days after surgery
Rate of isolated symptomatic distal DVT
rate of symptomatic distal DVT
Time frame: within 90 days after surgery
Rate of myocardial infarction (MI) or stroke
rate of MI or stroke
Time frame: within 90 days after surgery
Rate of readmission to the hospital
rate of readmissions to the hospital
Time frame: within 90 days after surgery
Number and terms of serious adverse events (SAEs)
number of SAEs during study duration
Time frame: within 90 days after surgery
Change in patient mobility
measured by Range of motion (ROM) and Timed up and Go (TUG) score
Time frame: within 90 days after surgery
Amount of postoperative healthcare resource utilization
visits to health care providers and rehospitalization, employment status
Time frame: within 35 days after surgery
Rate of major bleedings
fulfils at least one of the following criteria: (i) fatal (ii) bleeding into a critical area or organ (iii) surgical site bleeding that causes hemodynamic instability (iv) non-surgical site bleeding causing a fall in hemoglobin level of ≥ 20 g L-1, or leading to transfusion of ≥ 2 units of whole blood or red blood cells (v) surgical site bleeding that requires a second intervention (open, arthroscopic, endovascular), or hemarthron of sufficient size to delay mobilization or wound healing
Time frame: within 90 days after surgery
Generic quality of life measured by EQ-5D-5L
The EQ-5D is not an abbreviation and is the correct term to use in print or verbally. EQ-5D-5L consists of 2 parts: 1. descriptive system consists of 5 dimensions with 5 levels each. A score of 5 at a minimum means best health state; a score of 25 at a maximum means worst health state. 2. EQ VAS: a scale from 0 (worst health state) to 100 (best health state) is provided. This questionnaire is to be completed by the patient for the current day.
Time frame: within 90 days after surgery
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