Effectiveness of Acetazolamide in Reducing Paralysis of the Leg in Patients Undergoing Aortic Aneurysm Surgery Surgery
NCT ID: NCT01889498
Last Updated: 2014-12-31
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
PHASE4
100 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2014-07-31
2016-06-30
Brief Summary
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Treatments could be through open surgery or by use of stents (tubular mesh) through the groin. There is a risk of causing paraplegia, which is the loss/weakness of leg function as well as incontinence (loss of bladder and/or bowel control).
To try and prevent this, a number of techniques are used such as removing/draining of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) (the clear fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord).
Sometimes however;
* CSF cannot be drained
* drain cannot be inserted
* draining is unlikely to improve the situation
* Paralysis/weakness of the leg is seen
In these situations, the use of a drug called acetazolamide may be helpful. This reduces the production of CSF and therefore decreases the need for CSF draining. It may also have an effect in decreasing the risk of paraplegia.
Patients will be randomly (by chance) placed into one of two groups. One will get the drug as tablets and injection and the other will not receive any acetazolamide at all. Blood tests will be done in both groups. We expect to have 100 patients in the study, with patient involvement for a total of 10 days (maximum).
Detailed Description
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1. A CSF drain cannot be inserted for technical reasons
2. The CSF is blood stained precluding use
3. Drainage per hour is outside of the protocol guidelines (\>20mls/hr)
4. Intracranial Pressure (ICP) remains high despite drainage
5. There is neurological impairment (detection; clinical or Motor Evoked Potentials) despite adhering to the protocol.
A hypothesis has been developed by the team that a drug called acetazolamide may be of use when these scenarios are encountered. Acetazolamide (carbonic anhydrase inhibitor) is a conventional diuretic but is also a drug used by travellers to counteract mountain sickness and one of its effects is to reduce CSF production. A low-dose (250mg orally) of the drug has been shown to be effective as a prophylaxis method in acute mountain sickness 3. Its oral form has also been utilised to reduce shunt CSF volume in children4. Additionally, Acetazolamide has been suggested as a 'first-line treatment' in Idiopathic intracranial hypertension 9, 10. To date, we have used this drug intravenously in 7 thoracic-abdominal patients, off licence, and had encouraging results (SEE APPENDIX 1) with a reduction of intracranial pressure (ICP) in some but not all patients. At the moment however, this drug is only licenced (approved by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA)) for use in glaucoma, epileptic patients and patients with abnormal fluid retention. We hypothesize that the use of acetazolamide post operatively, in the 5 scenarios just described, results in the reduction of CSF production and hence ICP. Following from this we believe there was a reduced need for vasopressors and improved spinal cord blood perfusion. Undoubtedly in some patients this drug has a dramatic effect on CSF production, ICP and the need for drainage and vasopressors, all potential beneficial consequences. We do not know however whether the drug works in all patients and whether there are consequences from the other effects of this drug such as acidosis, hypercapnia or diuresis. In addition, we do not know whether the drug is best given preoperatively, as a prophylactic measure, or whether the preoperative treatment will improve the response to the intravenous postoperative dose. In addition, we do not know whether these measures which intuitively should lower the risk of paraplegia, actually translate into a lowering of this complication.
General hypothesis: Acetazolamide may safely be used as a preoperative prophylactic measure (orally), as well as postoperatively (intravenous) as a treatment measure when the spinal drain protocol is exceeded, to modify CSF production and reduce the risk of neurological impairment as measured biochemically, spectroscopically, electrically and clinically.
This study cannot be powered to test for a statistical effect on clinically evident paraplegia as its frequency in our institution is 5% thus at our current activity of 30 cases per year of TAA and ..??… cases of thoracic stents., the study would need to run over 5 years. The numbers are sufficient to demonstrate a significant change in the relatively common end-points noted below. This study therefore serves to prove the utility of acetazolamide in modifying factors we consider influential in the development of paraplegia. Should this study prove positive we aim to roll out to an international multicentre study to test for clinical effectiveness in reducing paraplegia.
Hypothesis
Acetazolamide reduces the following clinically relevant end-points:
1. Intracranial pressure recorded immediately after line insertion, throughout surgery and post-operatively (only recordings post-operatively will be treated as an end-point)
2. Need to drain large quantities of CSF
3. Incidence of non-clinically evident paraplegia (measured by motor evoked potential only)
4. Incidence of clinically evident paraplegia
5. The need for vasopressor drugs
6. Incidence of non-clinically evident neurological dysfunction (measured by microwave technology)
7. Incidence of non-clinically evident neurological dysfunction (measured by CSF/serum biomarkers)
Research Objective: The randomised trial aims to investigate the inhibitory properties of the drug to decrease CSF production and reduce ICP, which would in effect decline paraplegia risk induced by elevated ICP.
Study design: A single-centre, randomized, unblinded, controlled trial comparing acetazolamide versus usual practice
Sample size: n=100 (50 patients per group)
Power calculation was estimated as follows:
1. For a reduction of 50% from the control group to the treatment group; We require 32 patients in each group for a significant difference of 5% (P\<0.05) We require 54 patients in each group for a significant difference of 1% (P\<0.01)
2. For a reduction of 25% from the control group to the treatment group; We require 116 patients in each group for a significant difference of 5% (P\<0.05). We require 192 patients in each group for a significant difference of 1% (P\<0.01
We chose to recruit a total of 100 patients in the sample size due to the limitations of availability sufficient numbers of patients undergoing this type of surgery in a single centre.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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control group with no acetazolamide
Treatment as usual without acetazolamide treatment
No interventions assigned to this group
Acetazolamide
Treatment arm
Acetazolamide
Acetazolamide twice a day, at 12 hour intervals:
* 250 mg Tablets; one tablet to be taken twice daily from three days before the day of surgery
* One tablet to take two hours before surgery
* 500mg Intravenous Acetazolamide; to be administered upon arrival in critical care post-surgery; continuing at 12 hour intervals until last acetazolamide administration at 72 hours.
Interventions
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Acetazolamide
Acetazolamide twice a day, at 12 hour intervals:
* 250 mg Tablets; one tablet to be taken twice daily from three days before the day of surgery
* One tablet to take two hours before surgery
* 500mg Intravenous Acetazolamide; to be administered upon arrival in critical care post-surgery; continuing at 12 hour intervals until last acetazolamide administration at 72 hours.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Patients who have been able to comply with the pre-operative course of acetazolamide treatment (treatment group) and who have had blood sample collected three days prior to surgery
* Patients with inserted spinal drain
Exclusion Criteria
* Patients without consent
* Patients in whom a spinal drain could not be positioned
* Patients with blood stained CSF
* Patients who have not adhered to pre-operative course of acetazolamide treatment
* Patients who have had a reaction to the drug, and consequently have had acetazolamide discontinued (but will make note of specific reactions and number of patients involved)
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Dr Mark Field
Consultant cardiac surgeon
Principal Investigators
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Mark Field, DPhil, MBBCh
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Liverpool Heart & Chest Hospital
Locations
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Liverpool heart & chest hospital
Liverpool, , United Kingdom
Liverpool Heart & Chest Hospital
Liverpool, , United Kingdom
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Mark L Filed, MBBS, PhD
Role: primary
Mark L Field, MBBS, PhD
Role: backup
References
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Crawford ES, Crawford JL, Safi HJ, Coselli JS, Hess KR, Brooks B, Norton HJ, Glaeser DH. Thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms: preoperative and intraoperative factors determining immediate and long-term results of operations in 605 patients. J Vasc Surg. 1986 Mar;3(3):389-404. doi: 10.1067/mva.1986.avs0030389.
Other Identifiers
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2013-001447-31
Identifier Type: EUDRACT_NUMBER
Identifier Source: secondary_id
954
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id