Abstract

BackgroundSurgical bleeding is associated with postoperative cardiovascular complications. The efficacy and safety of tranexamic acid (TXA) in noncardiac surgery are still uncertain. Statins may prevent perioperative cardiovascular complications. We conducted a pilot to assess the feasibility of a perioperative trial of TXA and rosuvastatin.MethodsUsing a factorial design, we randomized patients at cardiovascular risk undergoing noncardiac surgery to intravenous TXA (1 g at the start and end of surgery) or placebo, and oral rosuvastatin (40 mg before and 20 mg daily for 30 days after surgery) or placebo. Feasibility outcomes included recruitment rates, follow-up, and compliance to interventions. Clinical outcomes were secondarily explored.ResultsAfter 3 months, we changed the design to a partial factorial due to the difficult recruitment of statin-naive patients. Over 6 months, 100 patients were randomized in the TXA trial (49 TXA, 51 placebo), 34 in the rosuvastatin trial (18 rosuvastatin, 16 placebo). Ninety-two percent (95% CI 80–98) of TXA and 86% (95% CI 74–94) of TXA-placebo patients received the 2 study doses. Thirty-three percent (95% CI 13–59) of rosuvastatin patients and 37% (95% CI 15–65) of rosuvastatin-placebo patients discontinued the study drug. A major cardiovascular complication occurred at 30 days in 1 TXA and 6 TXA-placebo patients, and 1 rosuvastatin and no rosuvastatin-placebo patients.ConclusionsOur pilot study supports the feasibility of a perioperative TXA trial in noncardiac surgery. Feasibility of a perioperative rosuvastatin trial is uncertain because of a high prevalence of statin use in the target population and concerns about compliance.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.govNCT02546648.

Highlights

  • Surgical bleeding is associated with postoperative cardiovascular complications

  • Over 6 months, 100 patients were enrolled in the tranexamic acid (TXA) factorial; 49 patients were randomized to TXA, 51 to TXAplacebo

  • Thirty-four of these patients were enrolled in the rosuvastatin trial (18 randomized to rosuvastatin and 16 to rosuvastatin-placebo)

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Summary

Introduction

Surgical bleeding is associated with postoperative cardiovascular complications. The efficacy and safety of tranexamic acid (TXA) in noncardiac surgery are still uncertain. The pathogenesis of cardiovascular (CV) complications after noncardiac surgery is multifactorial [5, 6]. One mechanism involves perioperative bleeding, which is common and independently associated with postoperative myocardial infarction (MI) and stroke [7,8,9]. TXA has the potential to reduce bleeding in noncardiac surgery, but its efficacy and safety in this clinical setting have not been established. By reducing bleeding, TXA may prevent CV events. All noncardiac surgery studies on TXA to date are underpowered to investigate the effect on thromboembolic events and establish TXA overall benefit

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