Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT02094157

Tapered Warfarin or Interrupted Warfarin With Heparin Bridging for Pacemaker or Defibrillator Implantation

An Open-Label Randomized Control Trial of Pre-Operative Low Molecular Weight Heparin Versus Tapered Warfarin as Bridging Therapy for Patients With Implantation of Pacemaker or Defibrillator

Status
Terminated
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
173 (actual)
Sponsor
McMaster University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Approximately 2 million patients in North America are currently treated with the blood thinner warfarin. These patients have every year more than 200,000 invasive procedures, for which warfarin must be stopped to avoid bleeding complication. To protect the patient against blood clots and stroke while warfarin is stopped, most physicians today order "bridging" with low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH). This is another blood thinner and it is injected under the skin during 3 days before the procedure. For implantation of pacemaker or defibrillator (27,000/year in Canada) the "bridging" routines vary a lot.The common "bridging" treatment with LMWH for 3 days before pacemaker surgery causes bleeding in the "pocket" where the pacemaker is placed in about 5%. For comparison, patients not on any blood thinners develop this bleeding in 2% after this surgery. "Pocket bleeding" may require evacuation of the blood collection and may cause infection. "Pocket bleeding" is thus a fairly common and clinically important but rarely a dangerous bleeding complication. It is a suitable safety endpoint in a study of "bridging" of blood thinners. LMWH costs $80-120, for which some patients are not covered. They have to be taught self-injection technique or have a nurse come to their home. The main hypothesis is if patients on blood thinners can be managed more conveniently before and after pacemaker surgery, without injections, without increased risk of pocket bleeding.

Detailed description

Patients are recruited from those routinely referred before surgery for adjustment of their blood thinners. Suitable and consenting patients are randomized to one of the two regimens. They will either stop warfarin for 5 days and replace it with injections of LMWH for 3 days before pacemaker or implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) surgery. The other group will have the dose of warfarin reduced to half for 3-6 days before surgery, depending on how thin their blood is. For all patients the degree of blood thinning is checked the day before surgery. If the blood is still to thin, the patient is instructed to take by mouth a dose of vitamin K, provided by us, to reduce the effect of warfarin. After surgery the patients restart warfarin at a double dose for 1 or 2 days to quickly reach the therapeutic effect again. Staff from the Pacemaker or Defibrillator Clinic, unaware of the treatment allocation, examines the patient for bleeding in the implantation pocket before they leave the hospital, and at routine follow-up after 2-3 weeks and 90 days.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGTapered warfarin regimenThis intervention is assigned to the experimental arm - Tapered warfarin regimen
DRUGBridged regimen Low-molecular-weight heparinThis intervention is assigned to the active control arm - Bridged regimen

Timeline

Start date
2007-12-01
Primary completion
2013-11-01
Completion
2014-03-01
First posted
2014-03-21
Last updated
2016-04-05

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02094157. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.