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Nonapeptide-1

Melanostatine-5, White 05

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Studies 4
Trials 100
Completed OBSERVATIONAL NCT03034850

Thrombin Generation and Platelet Activation in CRS/HIPEC

View on ClinicalTrials.gov Updated Dec 15, 2025

Brief Summary

Cytoreductive surgery (CRS) with hyperthermic intraperitoneal peroperative chemotherapy (HIPEC), indicated for patients with peritoneal metastases from digestive or gynecological malignancies alike, demonstrates a considerable impact on hemostatic metabolism, both on platelet and on coagulation level. The potential hemostatic interference in CRS and HIPEC is phase dependent. This study demonstrates the combined use of ROTEM (rotational thromboelastometry), PACT (platelet activation test) and CAT (thrombin generation test) assays during CRS and HIPEC with a follow-up of 7 days postoperative.

Detailed Description

The purpose of this study was to quantitatively assess the impact of CRS and HIPEC, on various components of hemostasis. Routine laboratory assays such as activated clotting time, activated partial thromboplastin time, prothrombin time, or platelet count might, as demonstrated previously, insufficiently provide specificity and/or sensitivity to assess coagulation and platelet disorders. Therefore, additionally thrombin generation (TG) was analyzed by the calibrated automated thrombogram assay (CAT). Also, platelet function was quantitatively assessed by the PAC-t-UB assay and rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM) was used to elucidate the contribution of platelets, intrinsic and extrinsic coagulation pathways in peri-operative bleeding. The hypothesis of this study was that the procedure exposed an increased thrombotic risk, resulting in a faster and increased TG and hyper platelet function?

Interventions

Name: CRS/HIPEC
Type: PROCEDURE
Description: The generic surgical approach involved peritonectomy procedures and visceral resections called CRS as described by Sugarbaker (1995). Peritoneal disease burden was assessed using the perito- neal cancer index (PCI), which scores 13 intra-abdominal sites on a scale of 0 (no disease) to 3 (lesion size \> 5 cm), thus giving a range of possible scores from 0 to 39. The same team performed the surgical procedure of all included patients. Before connection to the patient, the circuit was filled with dextrose 5% (2 L/m2 body surface area) and warmed to 37°C.

Primary Outcomes

Measure: Blood loss
TimeFrame: From surgical incision to 7 days postoperative
Description: Blood loss and administration of red blood cells, fresh frozen plasma and platelets. Blood loss is quantitatively assessed based on surgical drainage volume measurements, recorded every hour. Once the surgical drains are removed (average 7 days), blood loss is quantified by hemodynamic instability and abrupt, significant decrease of hemoglobin concentration. Blood loss is assessed from the date of CRS/HIPEC surgery until 7 days postoperative or date of death from any cause, whichever came first.

Trial Information

NCT ID

NCT03034850

Status

Completed

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Sponsor

Ziekenhuis Oost-Limburg

Last Updated

December 15, 2025