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WithdrawnNCT00407641

Effects of Tinzaparin on Cardio-vascular Outcomes and on Blood Lipids in Diabetic Patients on Chronic Hemodialysis

Effects of Tinzaparin Sodium on Cardio-vascular OUtcomes and on Blood Lipids in Diabetic Patients on Chronic HEmodialysis: A Long-term, Prospective Study (The "Tinzaparin COULD HELP" Study).

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
0 (actual)
Sponsor
Anemia Working Group Romania · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) provides a safe and effective alternative to UFH for hemodialysis anticoagulation. While unfractionated (UF) heparin has been implicated in hyper-lipidemia, the effect of LMWHs on the lipid profile in non-diabetic patients on chronic hemodialysis remains controversial. The effect of LMWH in diabetic patients, a high risk group for developing hyper-lipidemia and cardio-vascular disease, has not been studied. The study intends to examine the long-term effects of the replacement of UFH by LMWH (tinzaparin sodium) on cardio-vascular outcomes and on lipoprotein profiles in a large group of diabetic patients stable on HD.

Detailed description

Hemodialysed diabetic patients constitute a high-risk subset of patients for developing cardio-vascular disease, which accounts for nearly 50% of deaths. In those patients, mortality rates probably exceed 20% per year. After stratification for age, race and gender, cardio-vascular mortality is 10-20 times higher in these patients than in the general population. Thus cardio-vascular risk factors in these patients should be managed early, aggressively and in a multi-factorial manner in order to reduce their high cardio-vascular morbidity and mortality. Low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) provides a safe and effective alternative to UFH for hemodialysis anticoagulation. While unfractionated (UF) heparin has been implicated in hyper-lipidemia, the effect of LMWHs on the lipid profile in non-diabetic patients on chronic hemodialysis remains controversial. The effect of LMWH in diabetic patients, a high risk group for developing hyper-lipidemia and cardio-vascular disease, has not been studied. The study intends to examine the long-term effects of the replacement of UFH by LMWH (tinzaparin sodium) on cardio-vascular outcomes and on lipoprotein profiles in a large group of diabetic patients stable on HD. Tinzaparin sodium is superior to UFH in terms of reducing cardio-vascular and cerebrovascular outcomes (primary end-point). Tinzaparin sodium is superior to UFH in terms of reducing the specified lipid parameters of stable diabetic patients on chronic hemodialysis. A time-to-event analysis is the tool that will be used for recording events rate. Accordingly, the study will aim in enrolling 200 diabetic nephropathy patients, but allowing for a 10% drop-out rate, the number of evaluable patients in the study will be 180. Therefore, for the primary triple end-point of death/MI/stroke (ischemic) with 180 evaluable patients, we will have an 80% power (at a two-sided alpha level of 0.05) to detect a statistical significant difference in the 2 groups if the rate of events in the UFH group is 30% and on tinzaparin is 13% or less. For the secondary end-points in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, if we assume that the event rate in the UFH group is 50%, then a statistical significance can be achieved if the rate in the tinzaparin group is at 30% or less. For differences in average lipid values between the 2 groups, with 180 evaluable patients, a 2-sided alpha level at 0.05 and with 80% power, we can detect statistical significance if the difference is: for Total Cholesterol=19 mg/dL (SD of 46), for HDL-C = 4.6 mg/dL (SD=11), for TG = 30 mg/dL (SD=72), for LDL-C = 15 (SD=36) and for ApoB = 13 (SD=32).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGTinzaparin administrationPatients will receive tinzaparin during the HD session
DRUGHeparin administrationPatients will receive Heparin as an anticoagulant during the HD session.

Timeline

Start date
2009-03-01
Primary completion
2015-01-01
Completion
2017-01-01
First posted
2006-12-05
Last updated
2017-12-22

Locations

13 sites across 1 country: Romania

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00407641. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.