Skip to main content
Advertisement
  • Loading metrics

Optimal protamine dosing after cardiopulmonary bypass: The PRODOSE adaptive randomised controlled trial

  • Lachlan F. Miles ,

    Roles Conceptualization, Data curation, Investigation, Methodology, Supervision, Validation, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing

    lachlan.miles@unimelb.edu.au

    Affiliations Department of Critical Care, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia, Department of Anaesthesia, Austin Health, Melbourne, Australia

  • Christiana Burt,

    Roles Data curation, Investigation, Supervision, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Royal Papworth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Joseph Arrowsmith,

    Roles Data curation, Investigation, Supervision, Validation, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Royal Papworth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Mikel A. McKie,

    Roles Data curation, Formal analysis, Methodology, Supervision, Validation, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation MRC Biostatistics Unit, School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Sofia S. Villar,

    Roles Data curation, Formal analysis, Methodology, Supervision, Validation, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation MRC Biostatistics Unit, School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Pooveshnie Govender,

    Roles Data curation, Validation, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Royal Papworth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Ruth Shaylor,

    Roles Data curation, Resources, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Department of Anaesthesia, Austin Health, Melbourne, Australia

  • Zihui Tan,

    Roles Data curation, Resources, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Royal Papworth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Ravi De Silva,

    Roles Conceptualization, Supervision, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Department of Surgery, Royal Papworth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Florian Falter

    Roles Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Methodology, Project administration, Resources, Supervision, Validation, Visualization, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing

    Affiliation Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Royal Papworth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, United Kingdom

Abstract

Background

The dose of protamine required following cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is often determined by the dose of heparin required pre-CPB, expressed as a fixed ratio. Dosing based on mathematical models of heparin clearance is postulated to improve protamine dosing precision and coagulation. We hypothesised that protamine dosing based on a 2-compartment model would improve thromboelastography (TEG) parameters and reduce the dose of protamine administered, relative to a fixed ratio.

Methods and findings

We undertook a 2-stage, adaptive randomised controlled trial, allocating 228 participants to receive protamine dosed according to a mathematical model of heparin clearance or a fixed ratio of 1 mg of protamine for every 100 IU of heparin required to establish anticoagulation pre-CPB. A planned, blinded interim analysis was undertaken after the recruitment of 50% of the study cohort. Following this, the randomisation ratio was adapted from 1:1 to 1:1.33 to increase recruitment to the superior arm while maintaining study power. At the conclusion of trial recruitment, we had randomised 121 patients to the intervention arm and 107 patients to the control arm. The primary endpoint was kaolin TEG r-time measured 3 minutes after protamine administration at the end of CPB. Secondary endpoints included ratio of kaolin TEG r-time pre-CPB to the same metric following protamine administration, requirement for allogeneic red cell transfusion, intercostal catheter drainage at 4 hours postoperatively, and the requirement for reoperation due to bleeding. The trial was listed on a clinical trial registry (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03532594).

Participants were recruited between April 2018 and August 2019. Those in the intervention/model group had a shorter mean kaolin r-time (6.58 [SD 2.50] vs. 8.08 [SD 3.98] minutes; p = 0.0016) post-CPB. The post-protamine thromboelastogram of the model group was closer to pre-CPB parameters (median pre-CPB to post-protamine kaolin r-time ratio 0.96 [IQR 0.78–1.14] vs. 0.75 [IQR 0.57–0.99]; p < 0.001). We found no evidence of a difference in median mediastinal/pleural drainage at 4 hours postoperatively (140 [IQR 75–245] vs. 135 [IQR 94–222] mL; p = 0.85) or requirement (as a binary outcome) for packed red blood cell transfusion at 24 hours postoperatively (19 [15.8%] vs. 14 [13.1%] p = 0.69). Those in the model group had a lower median protamine dose (180 [IQR 160–210] vs. 280 [IQR 250–300] mg; p < 0.001).

Important limitations of this study include an unblinded design and lack of generalisability to certain populations deliberately excluded from the study (specifically children, patients with a total body weight >120 kg, and patients requiring therapeutic hypothermia to <28°C).

Conclusions

Using a mathematical model to guide protamine dosing in patients following CPB improved TEG r-time and reduced the dose administered relative to a fixed ratio. No differences were detected in postoperative mediastinal/pleural drainage or red blood cell transfusion requirement in our cohort of low-risk patients.

Trial registration

ClinicalTrials.gov Unique identifier NCT03532594.

Author summary

Why was this study done?

  • Mathematical models of heparin clearance have been postulated to reduce protamine dosing after cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) and may improve clotting after cardiac surgery.
  • Best practice guidelines have been unable to provide firm recommendations for the use of these models due to a lack of randomised clinical trial data.
  • The PRODOSE trial was designed to address this gap in the evidence.

What did the researchers do and find?

  • We tested a mathematical model designed to calculate a bespoke protamine dose in patients undergoing cardiac surgery with CPB who were at a relatively low risk of bleeding, comparing it to a fixed dose ratio that is currently used widely (1 mg of protamine for every 100 IU of heparin given to establish safe anticoagulation before CPB, commonly known as a 1:1 fixed dose ratio).
  • We found that using this mathematical model improved point-of-care measures of coagulation and reduced the amount of protamine given by 36.6% relative to the 1:1 fixed dose ratio.
  • We did not find a difference in postoperative bleeding or use of blood products between the groups. However, as this is a Phase II trial, the study was not designed to accurately assess clinical outcomes, with an emphasis instead on safety and biochemical efficacy.

What do these findings mean?

  • Our findings suggest that mathematical models of heparin clearance can be safely used to dose protamine in the population studied and that dosing protamine according to the commonly used 1:1 fixed dose ratio is probably excessive in this population.
  • Clinicians could consider using PRODOSE or similar models in patients at lower risk of bleeding after cardiac surgery in place of a 1:1 fixed dose ratio.
  • Further research with a focus on clinical outcomes and a population at a higher risk of bleeding is warranted.

Introduction

Adequate anticoagulation for cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is generally achieved using high doses of unfractionated heparin and is reversed using protamine sulphate [1]. Protamine can exert paradoxical anticoagulant (particularly inhibiting factor V activation and thrombin) and antiplatelet effects when administered in excess to circulating heparin [2]. Higher doses of protamine have been shown to increase the risk of transfusion and postoperative bleeding following cardiac surgery [3,4]. It is therefore prudent to dose protamine in such a way as to minimise these effects, while also ensuring effective heparin reversal.

Approaches to protamine dosing vary widely [5,6]. A common recommendation is a fixed 1:1 (1-mg protamine to every 100 IU of heparin) ratio based on the initial dose of heparin required to establish therapeutic anticoagulation [1,7]. This method does not directly account for heparin clearance and may lead to excessive protamine dosage [8]. Mathematical models have been proposed to enable the clinician to estimate the amount of circulating heparin at any time point based on common preoperative covariates, and thereby guide protamine administration. While small, nonrandomised studies of different models have shown that these approaches may improve coagulation and reduce protamine dose, uptake has been limited by a lack of prospective, randomised data [9]. To date, only 1 appropriately powered randomised trial has been published [10], and best practice guidelines continue to recommend the use of fixed dose ratios [11].

Following a pilot study [12], and having studied similar work [4,13], we hypothesised that protamine dosing guided by a 2-compartment pharmacokinetic derivation of heparin clearance would, relative to a conventional, fixed 1:1 ratio: (a) result in superior viscoelastic metrics of coagulation in the post-CPB period in patients undergoing cardiac surgery; and (b) use less protamine to achieve satisfactory haemostasis.

Methods

Trial design

We performed a 2-stage, adaptive randomised superiority trial. Patients in the first stage of the trial were randomised with equal probability using a blocked randomisation procedure to the intervention (PRODOSE model) or control (fixed 1:1 ratio) arms. An interim analysis was scheduled to check for safety, consider a predefined futility rule, and an adaptation of the randomisation ratio based on the primary outcome data at that point aimed at maximising the number of patients in the superior arm while maintaining study power. The trial was performed at 2 centres—a dedicated cardiothoracic hospital in the United Kingdom and a tertiary, university-affiliated hospital in Australia. Ethical approval was received from the UK Health Research Authority (17/EE/0460) and the Austin Health Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC/17/Austin/566). The trial was registered (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03532594). All participants gave written informed consent prior to any study-related procedures.

Study population

All patients presenting for cardiac surgery requiring CPB were considered for inclusion. Warfarin or novel oral anticoagulant therapy was ceased 5 or 3 days, respectively, prior to operation. Patients were excluded if they were <18 years old, had a total body weight >120 kg (due to unpredictable heparin requirements in obese individuals) [14], were dialysis dependent, had a known blood dyscrasia or platelet dysfunction, had received adenosine diphosphate receptor antagonists within 7 days of surgery, had received an unfractionated heparin infusion or therapeutic low molecular weight heparin <24 hours before surgery, required emergency surgery (defined as operation before the beginning of the next working day after the decision to operate was made), had an operative plan requiring therapeutic hypothermia to <28°C, had complex surgical requirements (redo sternotomy, surgery on aortic arch, or descending thoracic aorta), or were undergoing solid organ transplantation.

Coagulation management and conduct of cardiopulmonary bypass

A 2-g dose of tranexamic acid was administered to all patients prior to or with heparin. The initial dose of heparin (heparin sodium, Fannin (UK), Measham, UK or Pfizer Australia, Sydney, Australia) was 300 IU/kg based on total body weight, with a target activated clotting time (ACT) of ≥400 seconds. Another 5,000 IU of heparin was added to the pump prime. CPB was undertaken using flow rates of 2.2 to 2.5 min/m2. Nasopharyngeal temperature was managed according to surgical preference (within the limitations of the protocol). The ACT was repeated every 30 minutes, and additional heparin was administered if this was ≤400 seconds. The administration of blood products in the operating room and for the first 24 hours postoperatively was based on standard institutional practices, codified to promote consistency (S1 Appendix).

Randomisation and intervention

Participants were randomised immediately prior to or following induction of anaesthesia. The anaesthetist and surgeon were not blinded. Randomisation was implemented using a web-based portal (Sealed Envelope, London, UK) and a random permuted block algorithm with a block of size 4, stratified by centre to target the randomisation ratio established for each of the trial stages. In the first stage of the trial, participants were randomised in a 1:1 ratio. At the interim analysis, the randomisation ratio was adapted using primary outcome data up to that point, following our design based on methods first described by Zhang and Rosenberger and extended by simulations to accommodate violation of design assumptions (S2 Appendix) [15]. These predetermined rules aimed to maximise the number of patients in the treatment arm trending towards statistical superiority, ensuring that most patients received better treatment while preserving study power.

The control group received protamine post-CPB at a fixed dose ratio of 1 mg for every 100 IU of unfractionated heparin administered in the pre-CPB period to obtain the target ACT. This ratio was chosen as it is supported by expert guidance [11]. The intervention group received protamine dosed according to the amount of residual heparin calculated to remain at the end of CPB according to the PRODOSE model. Further doses of protamine were permitted in the operating theatre or within 4 hours of arrival in the intensive care unit (ICU) following the initial dose if thromboelastography (TEG) suggested residual heparinisation was present or to correct for residual heparin in unprocessed pump blood administered to the participant. Routine cell salvage was not employed at either institution for the management of the recruited patient population.

The PRODOSE model

We previously performed a pilot study to validate a single-compartment pharmacokinetic model that predicted elimination of heparin corrected for ideal body weight [12]. This was then combined with the second compartment of a model described by Meesters and colleagues [13] to yield the following equation: where A = 0.1, α = 10, and B = 0.9. The equation was imported into Microsoft Excel (Microsoft, Redmond, Washington, United States of America). Ideal body weight was calculated using the Devine formula [16]. If total body weight was less than the ideal body weight, the former was used. The quantity of heparin in circulation at a given point in time (Ct) is calculated based on the initial loading dose or the amount of heparin calculated to be present at the time after the immediately previous administration (C0) and the time elapsed since the last administration (t). At the conclusion of CPB, the final quantity of heparin within the system was calculated, and a protamine dose was administered at a ratio of 1-mg protamine for every 100 IU of heparin remaining.

Laboratory and point-of-care investigations

Baseline investigations were performed following induction of anaesthesia, but prior to systemic heparinisation. These were the following: kaolin ACT, kaolin and heparinase TEG, full blood examination, prothrombin time (PT), and activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT). TEG parameters were measured using the TEG 5000 or TEG 6s devices (Haemonetics, Braintree, Massachusetts, USA). These investigations were repeated 3 minutes after protamine administration following separation from CPB to ensure complete circulation of protamine before sampling was performed.

Primary and secondary outcomes

The primary outcome was kaolin TEG r-time at 3 minutes post-protamine administration. This endpoint was chosen as it is far more sensitive to protamine-induced in vitro coagulation abnormalities than ACT [17], is a commonly used point-of-care test in clinical practice, and was the primary endpoint in the previous study we most closely sought to replicate [13]. Secondary outcomes were ratio of kaolin TEG r-time to heparinase TEG r-time at 3 minutes post-protamine administration, ratio of kaolin TEG r-time pre-CPB to kaolin TEG r-time at 3 minutes post-protamine administration, ratio of kaolin ACT pre-CPB to kaolin ACT at 3 minutes post-protamine administration mediastinal/pleural drainage 4 hours postoperatively, and requirement for allogeneic red blood cell transfusion in the first 24 hours postoperatively. Return to theatre for bleeding in the first 24 hours following the procedure was included as a safety endpoint. Time points for postoperative measurement of mediastinal/pleural drainage, transfusion requirement, and return to theatre were based on previous studies [18]. Observed outcomes beyond these times were unlikely to be primarily related to heparin/protamine interactions at the time of surgery.

Sample size calculation

The sample size was derived using summary measures of intrinsic rotational thromboelastometry (INTEM) clotting time (CT) as a TEG r-time surrogate from a comparable population [13]. Using a control post-protamine INTEM CT of 4.2 minutes, a standard deviation of 1.27 minutes, and a predicted effect size of 15%, simulations of the proposed design showed that a total sample size of 212 participants would result in type I and II error rates of 3.6% and 10%, respectively. The equivalent mean TEG r-time of the control group when transformed from INTEM CT was predicted to be 8 minutes with a standard deviation of 2.5 minutes [19]. To allow for missing data caused by changes of surgical plan leading to exclusion of a randomised participant, lack of follow-up data, or equipment malfunction, we recruited 228 participants, with an initial randomisation ratio of 1:1 between intervention and control groups.

Interim analysis

Interim analysis was planned after recruitment of 50% (n = 114) of the study cohort. At this point, recruitment was paused, and data were considered. Specifically, the trial would be stopped if the return to theatre rate was significantly increased in the intervention arms or the t-statistic observed in the primary endpoint was higher than the prespecified futility boundary (u1 = 1.8). If the primary outcome did not exceed the limits for safety or futility, then the preplanned adaptation of the randomisation ratio was to be done according to closed-form formulae in case of normality, while in the case of deviations from normality, the randomisation ratio would be adapted to 1:1.33, in favour of the beneficial treatment arm only if the observed treatment difference at the interim was half the predicted significant difference (7.5%). If the difference was less than 7.5%, the randomisation ratio would be maintained at 1:1 under deviations from normality. This is explained further in the Supporting information appended to this manuscript (S2 Appendix). Deviations from normality were determined through a significant (p < 0.05) Shapiro–Wilk test, and an observed difference exceeding the 7.5% threshold was observed. This triggered the randomisation rate that ensured more patients received the treatment arm, while the study power of 90% was preserved under assumptions of an exponential distribution. To minimise bias, only the primary endpoint and safety variables were analysed. The interim and final analyses were performed by 2 different statisticians. The clinical investigators remained blinded to any change of randomisation strategy.

Statistical analysis

Primary efficacy analysis was carried out through a re-randomisation–based method, both ensuring type I error was preserved despite deviations in assumptions (that could not be corrected by transformation) and mitigating potential bias introduced by the adaptive design in a single technique [20]. Participants were ordered by recruitment date, and their group assignment was resampled at random 100,000 times using the design randomisation procedure and assuming no treatment difference (S2 Appendix). The p-value was determined by the proportion of times that more extreme results than true results were observed by chance. Due to the minor change in randomisation ratio, the treatment effect and associated 95% confidence intervals were calculated using standard methods. For hypothesis testing, we report both standard p-values and a p-value that adjusts for the adaptive nature of the randomisation ratio as explained above.

For secondary efficacy analyses, all continuous variables were summarised using descriptive statistics depending on normality, specifically n (non-missing sample size), mean, SD, median, and IQR. Frequency and percentages were reported for categorical measures. Data were reported using confidence intervals and p-values where appropriate. The chi-squared test or Fisher exact test were used for categorical data and t tests or Mann–Whitney U tests for continuous data. The full trial protocol is appended to this manuscript (S1 Protocol). Trial enrolment, allocation, and follow-up were reported according to the adaptive designs CONSORT extension statement (S1 Checklist) [21].

Results

Interim results

A mean reduction in r-time of 1.86 minutes between the intervention and control arms was observed at interim analysis. The test statistic (−2.79) was below the predefined futility boundary (u1 = 1.8). There was no significant difference in reoperation for bleeding (p = 0.34). Investigators were therefore allowed to recruit the second half of the study cohort. The Shapiro–Wilk test for normality was performed as stipulated by the study protocol; we found that the distribution of the primary outcome deviated significantly from normality (intervention, p = 0.0061; control, p = 0.011), thus triggering our adaptive decision rules based on an exponential distribution (S2 Appendix). As the relative difference between arms was 21.1% and therefore greater than 7.5%, we adapted the randomisation ratio for the remaining participants to be 1:1.33 as per the design.

Full study results

Participant characteristics.

Participants were recruited between April 2018 and August 2019 with interim analysis in May 2019. Of 520 patients screened, 228 met study inclusion criteria, consented to participate, and were randomised. Over the course of the study, 121 were allocated to the intervention group and 107 to the control group. A total of 7 participants were excluded from the intervention group due to inadvertent mechanical disruption during performance of the baseline or repeat TEG (Fig 1), and 1 participant in the intervention group was excluded due to lack of recorded data postoperatively. Participant characteristics, preoperative laboratory studies, and pre-CPB TEG results were similar when compared (Table 1).

thumbnail
Fig 1. ACE flow diagram of trial progress.

ACE, Adaptive designs CONSORT Extension; CONSORT, Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials; TEG, thromboelastography.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003658.g001

thumbnail
Table 1. Preoperative characteristics and covariates of participants allocated to the intervention (PRODOSE model) and control (fixed 1:1 ratio) groups.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003658.t001

Heparin and protamine dosing.

Pre-CPB heparin dosing was similar in both groups (Table 2). A median reduction of 36.6% was observed in protamine dosing in the intervention group relative to the control group (p < 0.001), translating to a lower initial protamine:heparin ratio in the intervention group, based on the initial dose required to achieve a therapeutic ACT for CPB (p < 0.001). A similar difference was noted when the same ratio was recalculated for the total quantity of protamine administered relative to the initial dose of heparin when accounting for any additional protamine administered (p < 0.001). No difference was noted in the number of participants who required additional protamine within 4 hours postoperatively (10 [8.3%] versus 9 [8.4%]; p = 1.00).

thumbnail
Table 2. Unfractionated heparin and protamine dosing of participants allocated to the intervention (PRODOSE model) and control (fixed 1:1 ratio) groups.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003658.t002

Primary endpoint.

The results from 221 participants were analysed for the primary endpoint (intervention group, n = 114; control group, n = 107). The mean TEG r-time measured 3 minutes post-protamine was significantly shorter in the intervention group, relative to the control group (6.58 [SD 2.5] versus 8.08 [SD 4.0] minutes; p = 0.0016; standard p = 0.0011). The resultant standard treatment effect was a 1.5 (95% CI 0.61 to 2.39) minute reduction in post-protamine TEG r-time in the intervention group relative to the control group.

Secondary endpoints.

While the r-time in the intervention group was more closely approximated to pre-CPB, a 25% increase in r-time post-CPB in the control group relative to baseline was noted (p < 0.001) (Table 3). No difference in the ratio of post-CPB heparinase TEG to kaolin TEG ratio (p = 0.747) or in the ratio of ACT pre-CPB to post-CPB (p = 0.847) was seen in the intervention group, relative to the control group. We detected no evidence of a difference in mediastinal/pleural drainage at 4 hours postoperatively in the intervention group relative to the control group (p = 0.85). Similarly, no evidence of difference was demonstrated in requirement for allogeneic red blood cell transfusion in the first 24 hours postoperatively (p = 0.69) or the number of units of PRBCs administered intraoperatively (p = 0.967) or postoperatively (p = 0.719).

thumbnail
Table 3. Secondary endpoints for participants allocated to the intervention (PRODOSE model) and control (fixed 1:1 ratio) groups.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003658.t003

Additional data.

Following administration of protamine, no clinically or statistically significant differences were demonstrated in the intervention group relative to the control group in mean haemoglobin concentration (100.7 [SD 13.7] g/L versus 101.7 [SD 11.7] g/L; p = 0.559), median platelet count (145 [IQR 116 to 178] × 109/L versus 134 [112 to 166] × 109/L; p = 0.153), median aPTT (39.5 [IQR 34.2 to 44.8] seconds versus 37.9 [IQR 32.8 to 42.1] seconds p = 0.123), median PT (15.9 [IQR 14.7 to 16.8] seconds versus 16.0 [IQR 15.0 to 16.9] seconds; p = 0.529), or median fibrinogen concentration (2.0 [IQR 1.7 to 2.4] g/L versus 2.1 [IQR 1.7 to 2.3] g/L; p = 0.559). No differences were noted in requirement for fresh frozen plasma or prothrombin complex concentrate (19 [15.8%] versus 14 [13.1%]; p = 0.221), platelets (5 [4.2%] versus 2 [1.9%]; p = 0.451), or cryoprecipitate/fibrinogen concentrate (0 [0%] versus 3 [2.8%]; p = 0.103) up to 24 hours postoperatively.

Post-CPB TEG data are shown in Table 4 (in addition to the stated primary and secondary outcomes). These were performed as post hoc exploratory analyses. The intervention group was statistically superior in a variety of metrics, including kaolin k-time (p = 0.013), α-angle (p = 0.002) and maximum amplitude (MA) (p = 0.05), and heparinase r-time (p = 0.003), k-time (p = 0.01), and α-angle (p = 0.006).

thumbnail
Table 4. Kaolin and heparinase post-CPB TEG results for participants allocated to the intervention (PRODOSE model) and control (fixed 1:1 ratio) groups.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003658.t004

Safety endpoint.

No difference was noted in rate of reoperation for bleeding in the first 24 hours after the primary operation (3 [2.5%] versus 3 [2.8%]; p = 1.00).

Discussion

We conducted an adaptive, open-label, randomised superiority trial of mathematical model-based protamine dosing versus a standardised 1:1 fixed ratio following CPB in patients presenting for non-emergent cardiac surgery. We found that model-based dosing led to superior in vitro clot kinetics in the post-CPB period as measured by kaolin TEG r-time and that participants in the intervention group had a viscoelastic profile that more closely mirrored their pre-CPB condition. Furthermore, we found that this result was achieved with a median 36.6% reduction in protamine dose. Despite this reduction in protamine dose, we found no evidence of clinically or statistically significant difference in postoperative bleeding or transfusion requirement.

Debate regarding the best numerical ratio has been ongoing for some time [22,23] and has spurred the development of other techniques for optimised protamine dosing such as point-of-care, individualised titration devices [24,25]. However, these are expensive, and their performance is mixed [2327]. Pharmacokinetic algorithms have been promoted as a cheaper, more readily accessible alternative. Previous retrospective observational [13,28], prospective observational [12,2931], and pilot randomised controlled trials [32,33] have examined different mathematical models for determining heparin concentration following CPB. Kjellberg and colleagues have performed the sole, adequately powered randomised trial in the literature that compares such a model to a fixed ratio approach [10]. Like our findings, this study demonstrated a reduction in the amount of protamine required at the conclusion of CPB but did not show a statistically significant difference in blood loss or transfusion.

It must be acknowledged that this trial was not designed or powered to detect a difference in clinical endpoints, and type II error cannot be excluded. Our exclusion criteria were chosen to minimise the risk of postoperative bleeding so that the effect of the intervention on TEG r-time could be investigated without the potential confounding effects of major haemorrhage that is inherent to certain cardiac surgical procedures and patients. A similar trial in a cardiac surgical population at higher risk for bleeding (i.e., complex aortic surgery and/or preoperative heparin infusion), powered specifically to look at these outcomes, should be considered.

There are a number of distinctions between our study and this previous work [10]. Notably, Kjellberg and colleagues did not quantitatively measure any coagulation function (other than ACT) as an endpoint, limiting their analysis to bleeding and transfusion. We chose viscoelastic testing as our primary outcome measure for 3 reasons: Firstly, TEG and similar devices are able to detect in vitro abnormalities at far lower protamine concentrations than ACT [17], and, in some prospective studies, are more predictive of postoperative bleeding than conventional coagulation tests [34]. We acknowledge that the relationship between deranged viscoelastic metrics and bleeding is inconsistent when multivariate analysis is performed [35]. Secondly, following the publication of Karkouti and colleagues [36], viscoelastic testing now forms the basis of many integrated transfusion algorithms in cardiac surgery, and, therefore, the incorporation of TEG into our study, combined with easily measured and clinically relevant secondary outcomes, make our results more generalisable (within the limits of the study design and exclusion criteria). Finally, TEG r-time was the primary outcome in the studies whose findings we most closely sought to confirm [4,13]. Another point of differentiation with Kjellberg and colleagues is our use of an adaptive design. This adaptive randomisation is a significant advantage—as well as a check for futility and safety; the interim analysis allowed adaptation of the randomisation ratio to recruit a higher number of patients to the arm trending towards benefit while preserving study power.

We acknowledge some limitations. Firstly, the surgeon and anaesthetist were not blinded to the group allocation. Any potential bias related to this was minimised by standardisation of coagulation management in the pre-CPB period, in the immediate post-CPB period, and in the first 24 hours postoperatively, and by the selection of quantitative rather than qualitative endpoints. Secondly, our model does not correct for the effects of possible hypothermia during CPB. Hypothermic CPB decreases heparin requirements [37], likely as a consequence of reduced heparin metabolism at lower temperatures [38]. This problem will not be resolved until the rate of heparin metabolism at differing temperatures is better defined and will require a continuous temperature input into any associated model. Thirdly, we did not measure intraoperative blood loss, as this is challenging to do accurately during cardiac surgery [39]. Kjellberg and colleagues did attempt to measure intraoperative blood loss and detected no statistically significant median difference (300 [IQR 200 to 500] versus 400 [IQR 250 to 500] mL; p = 0.219). Fourthly, our study made use of 2 types of TEG device depending on the recruiting centre (TEG 5000 or TEG 6s). The concordance between these devices appears consistent in the cardiac surgical setting [40]. Additionally, the study exclusion criteria mean the results cannot be generalised to certain groups (notably, obese patients, children, and those with end-stage kidney disease requiring dialysis). These patients should be the subject of further prospective validation. Finally, we did not make a further, formal assessment of coagulation beyond the 3-minute mark following protamine administration. Protamine is recognised as having a short biological half-life, with elimination from the circulation within 5 minutes [41]. Ergo, we cannot be certain that the observed effect on TEG r-time would have persisted beyond this initial measurement. However, the anticoagulant and antiplatelet effects of protamine are known to persist beyond this time [42], and increased protamine-to-heparin ratio has been linearly associated with prolonged postoperative bleeding [9].

We conclude that the PRODOSE model delivers improved in vitro metrics of clot firmness (specifically, our primary endpoint, TEG r-time) when compared to a fixed 1:1 ratio based on the initial dose of heparin required to achieve a therapeutic ACT for CPB. The model reduces the dose of protamine required by a median of 36.6%. In this population, this approach appeared safe. Further studies are necessary to determine whether there is a clinical benefit to this approach in patients undergoing cardiac surgery at higher risk for bleeding.

Supporting information

S1 Appendix. Trial guidance for operating theatre and ICU management of bleeding and coagulopathy.

ICU, intensive care unit.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003658.s001

(DOCX)

S1 Protocol. Trial protocol and protocol amendments.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003658.s003

(PDF)

S1 Checklist. ACE statement.

ACE, Adaptive designs CONSORT Extension; CONSORT, Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003658.s004

(DOCX)

Acknowledgments

The authors thank the Jon Moulton Charity Trust and UK Medical Research Council for the financial support necessary to conduct this study. The trial was conducted with the assistance of the Papworth Trials Unit Collaboration; special thanks are due to Mr Thomas Devine and Ms Carol Freeman for their support in project and data management. The authors also acknowledge the data management support provided by Ms Sofia Sidiropoulos, RN; Ms Sarah Bauch, RN; Ms Gayle Claxton, RN; and Ms Saskia Harris, RN of the Department of Anaesthesia, Austin Health.

References

  1. 1. Shore-Lesserson LJ, Baker RA, Ferraris VA, Greilich PE, Fitzgerald D, Roman P, et al. The Society of Thoracic Surgeons, The Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists, and The American Society of ExtraCorporeal Technology: Clinical Practice Guidelines—Anticoagulation During Cardiopulmonary Bypass. Ann Thorac Surg. 2018;105:650–62. pmid:29362176
  2. 2. Ni Ainle F, Preston RJS, Jenkins PV, Nel HJ, Johnson JA, Smith OP, et al. Protamine sulfate down-regulates thrombin generation by inhibiting factor V activation. Blood. 2009;114:1658–65. pmid:19531655
  3. 3. Kunz SA, Miles LF, Ianno DJ, Mirowska-Allen KL, Matalanis G, Bellomo R, et al. The effect of protamine dosing variation on bleeding and transfusion after heparinisation for cardiopulmonary bypass. Perfusion. 2018;33:445–52. pmid:29544405
  4. 4. Meesters MI, Veerhoek D, de Lange F, de Vries J-W, de Jong JR, Romijn JWA, et al. Effect of high or low protamine dosing on postoperative bleeding following heparin anticoagulation in cardiac surgery. A randomised clinical trial. Thromb Haemost. 2016;116:251–61. pmid:27277211
  5. 5. Miles LF, Coulson TG, Galhardo C, Falter F. Pump priming practices and anticoagulation in cardiac surgery: Results from the global cardiopulmonary bypass survey. Anesth Analg. 2017;125:1871–7. pmid:28614119
  6. 6. Lobato RL, Despotis GJ, Levy JH, Shore-Lesserson LJ, Carlson MO, Bennett-Guerrero E. Anticoagulation management during cardiopulmonary bypass: A survey of 54 North American institutions. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2010;139:1665–6. pmid:20303507
  7. 7. Meesters MI, von Heymann C. Optimizing Perioperative Blood and Coagulation Management During Cardiac Surgery. Anesthesiol Clin. 2019;37: 713–728. pmid:31677687
  8. 8. Wang J, Ma HP, Zheng H. Blood loss after cardiopulmonary bypass, standard vs titrated protamine: A meta-analysis. Neth J Med. 2013;71:123–7. pmid:23712807
  9. 9. Boer C, Meesters MI, Veerhoek D, Vonk ABA. Anticoagulant and side-effects of protamine in cardiac surgery: a narrative review. Br J Anaesth. 2018;120:914–27. pmid:29661409
  10. 10. Kjellberg G, Holm M, Fux T, Lindvall G, van der Linden J. Calculation Algorithm Reduces Protamine Doses Without Increasing Blood Loss or the Transfusion Rate in Cardiac Surgery: Results of a Randomized Controlled Trial. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth. 2019;33:985–992. pmid:30206011
  11. 11. Wahba A, Milojevic M, Boer C, De Somer FMJJ, Gudbjartsson T, Van Den Goor J, et al. 2019 EACTS/EACTA/EBCP guidelines on cardiopulmonary bypass in adult cardiac surgery. Eur J Cardiothorac Surg. 2020;57:210–51. pmid:31576396
  12. 12. Miles LF, Marchiori P, Falter F. Pilot validation of an individualised pharmacokinetic algorithm for protamine dosing after systemic heparinisation for cardiopulmonary bypass. Perfusion. 2017;32:481–8. pmid:28820026
  13. 13. Meesters MI, Veerhoek D, de Jong JR, Boer C. A Pharmacokinetic Model for Protamine Dosing After Cardiopulmonary Bypass. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth. 2016;30: 1190–5. pmid:27493093
  14. 14. Hohner EM, Kruer RM, Gilmore VT, Streiff M, Gibbs H. Unfractionated heparin dosing for therapeutic anticoagulation in critically ill obese adults. J Crit Care. 2015;30:395–9. pmid:25534987
  15. 15. Zhang L, Rosenberger WF. Response-adaptive randomization for clinical trials with continuous outcomes. Biometrics. 2006;62:562–9. pmid:16918921
  16. 16. Devine B. Gentamicin therapy. Drug Intell Clin Pharm. 1977;8:650–5.
  17. 17. Khan NU, Wayne CK, Barker J, Strang T. The effects of protamine overdose on coagulation parameters as measured by the thrombelastograph. Eur J Anaesthesiol. 2010;27:624–7. pmid:20485179
  18. 18. Teoh KHT, Young E, Blackall MH, Roberts RS, Hirsh J. Can extra protamine eliminate heparin rebound following cardiopulmonary bypass surgery? J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2004;128:211–9. pmid:15282457
  19. 19. Nielsen VG. A comparison of the Thrombelastograph and the ROTEM. Blood Coagul Fibrinolysis. 2007;18:247–52. pmid:17413761
  20. 20. Simon R, Simon NR. Using randomization tests to preserve type I error with response adaptive and covariate adaptive randomization. Stat Probab Lett. 2011;81:767–72. pmid:21769160
  21. 21. Dimairo M, Pallmann P, Wason J, Todd S, Jaki T, Julious SA, et al. The adaptive designs CONSORT extension (ACE) statement: a checklist with explanation and elaboration guideline for reporting randomised trials that use an adaptive design. Trials. 2020;21:528. pmid:32546273
  22. 22. Hecht P, Besser M, Falter F. Are We Able to Dose Protamine Accurately Yet? A Review of the Protamine Conundrum. J Extra Corpor Technol. 2020;52:63–70. pmid:32280146
  23. 23. Wright SJ, Murray WB, Hampton WA, Hargovan H, White L. Calculating the Protamine-Heparin Reversal Ratio: A Pilot Study Investigating a New Method. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth. 1993;7:416–21. pmid:8400096
  24. 24. Ichikawa J, Kodaka M, Nishiyama K, Hirasaki Y, Ozaki M, Komori M. Reappearance of circulating heparin in whole blood heparin concentration-based management does not correlate with postoperative bleeding after cardiac surgery. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth. 2014;28:1003–7. pmid:24508375
  25. 25. Shore-Lesserson LJ, Reich DL, DePerio M. Heparin and protamine titration do not improve haemostasis in cardiac surgical patients. Can J Anesth. 1998;45:10–8. pmid:9466020
  26. 26. Noui N, Zogheib E, Walczak K, Werbrouck A. Ben Amar A, Dupont H, et al. Anticoagulation monitoring during extracorporeal circulation with the Hepcon/HMS device. Perfusion. 2012;27:214–20. pmid:22301392
  27. 27. Abuelkasem E, Mazzeffi MA, Henderson RA, Wipfli C, Monroe A, Strauss ER, et al. Clinical Impact of Protamine Titration-Based Heparin Neutralization in Patients Undergoing Coronary Bypass Grafting Surgery. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth. 2019;33:2153–60. pmid:30737123
  28. 28. Cuenca JS, Diz PG, Sampedro FG, Marcos Gómez Zincke J, Acuña HR, Fontanillo M. Method to Calculate the Protamine Dose Necessary for Reversal of Heparin as a Function of Activated Clotting Time in Patients Undergoing Cardiac Surgery. J Extra Corpor Technol. 2013;45:235–41. pmid:24649571
  29. 29. Jia Z, Tian G, Ren Y, Sun Z, Lu W, Hou X. Pharmacokinetic model of unfractionated heparin during and after cardiopulmonary bypass in cardiac surgery. J Transl Med. 2015;13:45. pmid:25638272
  30. 30. Ödling Davidsson F, Johagen D, Appelblad M, Svenmarker S. Reversal of Heparin After Cardiac Surgery: Protamine Titration Using a Statistical Model. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth. 2015;29:710–4. pmid:25813226
  31. 31. Delavenne X, Ollier E, Chollet S, Sandri F, Lanoiselée J, Hodin S, et al. Pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic model for unfractionated heparin dosing during cardiopulmonary bypass. Br J Anaesth. 2017;118:705–12. pmid:28510738
  32. 32. Kjellberg G, Sartipy U, van der Linden J, Nissborg E, Lindvall G. An Adjusted Calculation Model Allows for Reduced Protamine Doses without Increasing Blood Loss in Cardiac Surgery. Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2016;64: 487–493. pmid:26270199
  33. 33. Hällgren O, Svenmarker S, Appelblad M. Implementing a Statistical Model for Protamine Titration: Effects on Coagulation in Cardiac Surgical Patients. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth. 2017;31:516–21. pmid:27712970
  34. 34. Sharma S, Kumar S, Tewari P, Pande S, Murari M. Utility of thromboelastography versus routine coagulation tests for assessment of hypocoagulable state in patients undergoing cardiac bypass surgery. Ann Card Anaesth. 2018;21:151–7. pmid:29652276
  35. 35. Welsh KJ, Padilla A, Dasgupta A, Nguyen AND, Wahed A. Thromboelastography is a suboptimal test for determination of the underlying cause of bleeding associated with cardiopulmonary bypass and may not predict a hypercoagulable state. Am J Clin Pathol. 2014;142:492–7. pmid:25239416
  36. 36. Karkouti K, Callum J, Wijeysundera DN, Rao V, Crowther M, Grocott HP, et al. Point-of-Care Hemostatic Testing in Cardiac Surgery: A Stepped-Wedge Clustered Randomized Controlled Trial. Circulation. 2016;134:1152–62. pmid:27654344
  37. 37. Ereth MH, Fisher BR, Cook DJ, Nuttall GA, Orszulak TA, Oliver WC. Normothermic Cardiopulmonary Bypass Increases Heparin Requirements Necessary to Maintain Anticoagulation. J Clin Monit Comput. 1998;14:323–7. pmid:9951757
  38. 38. Kaplan JA, Cohen JA, Frederickson EL, Kaplan JA. Plasma heparin activity and antagonism during cardiopulmonary bypass with hypothermia. Anesth Analg. 1977;56:564–70. pmid:560145
  39. 39. Jaramillo S, Montane-Muntane M, Capitan D, Aguilar F, Vilaseca A, Blasi A, et al. Agreement of surgical blood loss estimation methods. Transfusion. 2019;59:508–15. pmid:30488961
  40. 40. Lloyd-Donald P, Churilov L, Zia F, Bellomo R, Hart G, McCall P, et al. Assessment of agreement and interchangeability between the TEG5000 and TEG6S thromboelastography haemostasis analysers: A prospective validation study. BMC Anesthesiol. 2019;19:1–8.
  41. 41. Butterworth J, Lin YA, Prielipp R, Bennett J, James R. The pharmacokinetics and cardiovascular effects of a single intravenous dose of protamine in normal volunteers. Anesth Analg. 2002;94:514–22. pmid:11867368
  42. 42. Olsson A, Alfredsson J, Thelander M, Svedjeholm R, Sanmartin Berglund J, Berg S. Activated platelet aggregation is transiently impaired also by a reduced dose of protamine. Scand Cardiovasc J. 2019;53:355–60. pmid:31476919