Can nebulised HepArin Reduce morTality and time to Extubation in patients with COVID‐19 Requiring invasive ventilation Meta‐Trial (CHARTER‐MT): Protocol and statistical analysis plan for an investigator‐initiated international meta‐trial of prospective randomised clinical studies
airway extubation
nebulised heparin
randomized controlled trials as topic
610
heparin
lung
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
respiratory insufficiency
Humans
humans
Lung
rct
sars
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
SARS
Noninvasive Ventilation
Heparin
SARS-CoV-2
pandemic
randomised study
respiratory failure
noninvasive ventilation
COVID-19
Original Articles
unfractionated heparin
COVID-19 Drug Treatment
meta-trial
sars-cov-2
Treatment Outcome
covid-19
ards
treatment outcome
Airway Extubation
ARDS
Respiratory Insufficiency
RCT
DOI:
10.1111/bcp.15253
Publication Date:
2022-02-02T02:50:47Z
AUTHORS (19)
ABSTRACT
There is significant interest in the potential for nebulised unfractionated heparin (UFH), as a novel therapy for patients with COVID‐19 induced acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure requiring invasive ventilation. The scientific and biological rationale for nebulised heparin stems from the evidence for extensive activation of coagulation resulting in pulmonary microvascular thrombosis in COVID‐19 pneumonia. Nebulised delivery of heparin to the lung may limit alveolar fibrin deposition and thereby limit progression of lung injury. Importantly, laboratory studies show that heparin can directly inactivate the SARS‐CoV‐2 virus, thereby prevent its entry into and infection of mammalian cells. UFH has additional anti‐inflammatory and mucolytic properties that may be useful in this context.Methods and interventionThe Can nebulised HepArin Reduce morTality and time to Extubation in Patients with COVID‐19 Requiring invasive ventilation Meta‐Trial (CHARTER‐MT) is a collaborative prospective individual patient data analysis of on‐going randomised controlled clinical trials across several countries in five continents, examining the effects of inhaled heparin in patients with COVID‐19 requiring invasive ventilation on various endpoints.Each constituent study will randomise patients with COVID‐19 induced respiratory failure requiring invasive ventilation. Patients are randomised to receive nebulised heparin or standard care (open label studies) or placebo (blinded placebo‐controlled studies) while under invasive ventilation. Each participating study collect a pre‐defined minimum dataset. The primary outcome for the meta‐trial is the number of ventilator‐free days up to day 28 day, defined as days alive and free from invasive ventilation.
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