Which product saves more lives when someone bleeds after heart surgery – new trial recruits first patients
A new trial led by NHS Blood and Transplant and Queen Mary University of London has started investigating whether giving a clotting factor to people who bleed after heart surgery will help save and improve more lives.
Major bleeding is a feared complication after surgery. There are around 33,000 open heart surgeries in the UK each year. Around a third are followed by clinically significant bleeds, with increased risk of infection, organ damage and death.
Currently, severe bleeding is stopped by transfusion of Fresh Frozen Plasma (FFP), which is collected from blood donations. FFP contains proteins which help blood to clot. But it can cause transfusion side effects such as a transfusion related acute lung injury.
Prophesy-2 trial
The new Prophesy-2 trial is testing if giving people Prothrombin Complex Concentrate (PPC) – a concentrated form of pooled plasma – will have better outcomes.
PPC is richer in the proteins which help the blood to clot. This means it can be given in smaller doses, which reduces transfusion side effects.
However, no large studies have compared PCC with FFP.
Prophesy-2 will see whether PPC has better outcomes than FFP for a range of measures such as mortality, infection, and organ injury. It will also assess which treatment is more cost effective. The trial will randomise 496 participants over two years.
The trial is being run by NHS Blood and Transplant and Queen Mary University of London. It is funded with a grant from the National Institute of Health Care Research’s Health Technology Assessment programme. It is managed by NHSBT’s Clinical Trials Unit.
The first three sites have opened this month – Derriford Hospital in Plymouth, Southampton General, and St Bartholomew’s in London – and the first patient has just been randomised.