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UnknownNCT03623061

F-Point Validation Study

A Clinical Study to Define Precision, Accuracy, and Comparability of Results From a Novel Point of Care Fibrinogen Assay (F-Point), Compared to an Industry Standard

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
150 (estimated)
Sponsor
Royal College of Surgeons, Ireland · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers

Summary

The F-Point investigation is an open label, single centre prospective observational study in 3 cohorts of patients, one with low fibrinogen concentration, one with normal fibrinogen concentration, and one with high fibrinogen concentration To show statistical agreement between the fibrinogen level as recorded by the standard lab Clauss fibrinogen, and the fibrinogen level as recorded by the novel F-Point device.

Detailed description

The area to be investigated is the measurement of blood fibrinogen concentration. The aim is to develop a device which can give a fibrinogen level rapidly and accurately, in order to allow decision making quickly in emergency haemorrhage situations. Postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) is one of the leading causes of maternal mortality and morbidity throughout the world and is accountable for 27.1% of maternal deaths worldwide according to a recent WHO systematic analysis.1 The confidential enquiry into maternal deaths and morbidity 2012 - 2014 describes 13 deaths from maternal haemorrhage.2 Fibrinogen is an component of the coagulation cascade. It is the principal factor for the final stage of clot formation. The fibrinogen level increases during pregnancy from the first through to third trimester.3 During a PPH this level decreases rapidly, influenced by two principal mechanisms, the loss of the blood itself and the consumption of coagulation factors associated with coagulation activation. Fibrinogen level below 2g/L in the early phase of PPH correlates with subsequent development of severe PPH.4 The conventional laboratory tests (Clauss, PT-derived) are time consuming, and workload intensive for laboratory staff. This has implications in terms of decision making in a rapidly changing clinical environment during a massive PPH. A point of care test, with more rapidly available results at the patient location should improve the speed of decision making based on individual patient data. The focus of this study is to validate the fibrinogen concentration as measured by the F-point device compared to the laboratory standard Clauss fibrinogen. The F-Point is second generation POC device that is compatible with deployment within the emergency room or operating theater. By having rapid access to fibrinogen concentration results, early and individualized treatment can be implemented with the aim of improving patient outcomes, with a possible decrease in unnecessary administration of fibrinogen. We aim to show equivalent performance between the F-Point device in 3 populations. 1. Healthy non-pregnant females presenting for elective gynaecology surgery 2. Healthy pregnant females presenting for elective caesarean section 3. Anonymised low fibrinogen adult samples from the laboratory These 3 populations have been chosen to demonstrate device performance in: 1. Normal non-pregnant fibrinogen concentrations 2. Normal term pregnancy fibrinogen levels 3. Low fibrinogen concentrations By demonstrating equivalent and acceptable performance at these 3 fibrinogen concentration ranges, we would expect to show performance of the device to be acceptable for clinical use across the spectrum of patients presenting to maternity hospitals.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTF-PointF-Point (point of care in vitro diagnostic device for measuring plasma fibrinogen concentration)

Timeline

Start date
2018-05-14
Primary completion
2018-10-30
Completion
2018-10-30
First posted
2018-08-09
Last updated
2018-08-09

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Ireland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03623061. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.