The Auto-PLTS Study is a single-centre trial performed at Toronto General Hospital (TGH) that uses a randomized, patient preference design. The recent introduction of cold-stored platelets with a shelf-life of 14 days into clinical practice has made it possible to offer autologous apheresis platelet predonation to patients undergoing elective cardiac (and other high-blood-loss) surgeries while allowing sufficient time to recover platelet count before surgery. The Auto-PLTS Study is designed to assess whether replacing allogeneic platelets with autologous platelets will improve patient outcomes and benefit the healthcare system by reducing the burden on allogeneic platelet supply. The study is also designed to determine whether patients are willing to donate autologous platelets 7-10 days prior to surgery.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
100
Two units of autologous platelets will be collected via an apheresis machine that draws blood from an intravenous (IV) line over 1-2 hours, isolates and leukoreduces the platelets by centrifugation and returns the remaining blood back to the patients. Collected autologous platelets will be stored at 1-6℃ without agitation until they are needed during or after surgery or 14 days have elapsed since their collection, after which they will be destroyed as per standard institutional procedures for expired blood products. For the first two platelet orders within 24 hours of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) termination, patients will receive their autologous cold-stored platelets. For the third and subsequent doses, patients in the intervention group will receive allogeneic room temperature-stored platelets (standard of care).
Allogeneic platelets will be collected by Canadian Blood Services as per their standard operating procedures. Room temperature stored platelets will be stored at 20-24°C with constant agitation for up to 7 days as per current practices. For any platelet orders within 24 hours of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) termination, patients in the control group will receive allogeneic platelets as per usual care.
Toronto General Hospital - University Health Network
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Primary Efficacy Endpoint
The incidence of allogeneic platelet transfusion during the treatment period
Time frame: up to 24 hours after termination of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB)
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