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Ann Thorac Surg 1996;62:1575-1577
© 1996 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons


Editorials

Aprotinin: Safe and Effective Only With the Full-Dose Regimen

Peter K. Smith, MD, Lawrence H. Muhlbaier, MD

Division of Thoracic Surgery, Department of Surgery, and Division of Biometry, Department of Community and Family Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina

Although the efficacy of aprotinin in reducing transfusion requirements has been demonstrated for many subsets of cardiac surgical patients, the indications for its use remain controversial. There have been concerns regarding heparin management and safety since the initial United States randomized trial results were reported in 1992 [1]. Thoracic surgeons are also aware of safety concerns when aprotinin is employed with profound hypothermia and circulatory arrest [2, 3].

In this issue, Lemmer and associates [4] report the results achieved in the fourth published United States randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial designed to establish the effectiveness of aprotinin in coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Both Food and Drug Administration-approved dosing schemes (regimen A, full-dose "Hammersmith"; regimen B, half-dose) as well as a nonapproved pump-prime–only dosing scheme were shown to be effective in reducing blood and blood component use in primary CABG. They noted no significant difference in myocardial infarction rate, as determined by a central laboratory using predefined enzyme and electrocardiographic criteria, when comparing full-dose and half-dose aprotinin with placebo. A significantly increased rate of the most sensitive expression of myocardial infarction (definite, probable, or possible) was noted in the pump-prime–only arm compared with placebo. There were no statistically significant differences in mortality.

See also page 1659.

As Lemmer and associates point out, it is perhaps not surprising that a nonlinear dose-response curve could exist for aprotinin. The drug appears to act in a complicated way to alter the balance of procoagulant and anticoagulant enzyme cascades as they are effected by operation and cardiopulmonary bypass. Currently available information reveals that the empirically derived

full-dose scheme coupled with specifically controlled heparinization is effective in reducing blood product use and reducing reexploration for bleeding without an increase in the rates of myocardial infarction, death, or other significant complications.

Lemmer and associates conclude that both the full-dose and half-dose aprotinin regimens are safe and effective, whereas the pump-prime–only regimen is not recommended because of association with an increased rate of myocardial infarction. They recommend that the half-dose regimen be employed in patients at high risk for postoperative bleeding as the cost of treatment is reduced while the bleeding-reduction benefit is maintained.

An alternative view is that this is the third consecutive randomized trial to report excess mortality and myocardial infarction when less than full-dose aprotinin is employed in primary or reoperative coronary operations. Because these trials have all been designed to detect effectiveness, they have individually been too small to definitively determine safety issues. In the present trial, pump-prime–only aprotinin resulted in sufficient excess myocardial infarction to be identified as significant. There was also an increased rate of mortality in this arm, which failed to achieve statistical significance. The half-dose arm also had increased mortality and myocardial infarction, but again this was not statistically significant.

In the only other trial with a pump-prime–only arm, in reoperative CABG [5], the pump-prime–only arm actually had less myocardial infarction and less mortality. Both reoperative coronary trials [1, 5] reported excess mortality in the half-dose arm, and excess myocardial infarction when determined by central laboratory criteria. Cosgrove and associates [1] raised concern over early graft thrombosis and mortality with aprotinin, but the excess mortality occurred in the half-dose arm, whereas mortality was equivalent with full-dose aprotinin. Levy and associates [5] noted increased mortality and myocardial infarction with half-dose aprotinin, but because statistical significance was not achieved within the study (p = 0.354 for mortality) it was not emphasized.

Because of these discrepancies, we have pooled raw data for coronary bypass patients from the four published United States trials with unpublished data from two other trials obtained from Bayer Corporation to permit a more powerful analysis of low-incidence outcomes such as myocardial infarction, stroke, renal failure, and death. The patient populations, randomization, and 30-day or in-hospital mortality outcome are presented in Table 1Go. Because not all trials contain all study arms, and because individual trials contain primary CABG, reoperative CABG, or both distributed equally in the study arms, the placebo groups were matched for each aprotinin dose study group. Thus, although the randomization process assures validity of the aprotinin comparisons with placebo, it would not be correct to compare placebo groups or aprotinin groups with one another in our figures.


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Table 1. . Aprotinin Studies
 
Figure 1Go illustrates mortality trends and 95% confidence intervals for the 2,283 CABG patients randomized to placebo, pump-prime, half-dose aprotinin, and full-dose aprotinin. Figure 2Go illustrates myocardial infarction trends and 95% confidence intervals for the 1,861 CABG patients with central laboratory electrocardiographic and enzyme data. Figures 3 and 4GoGo illustrate changes from baseline creatinine level and stroke incidence, respectively.



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Fig 1. . Incidence of 30-day or in-hospital mortality with 95% confidence intervals for the three aprotinin dosing regimens and matched placebo groups.

 


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Fig 2. . Incidence of possible, probable, and definite myocardial infarction (MI) by central laboratory determination with 95% confidence intervals for the three aprotinin dosing regimens and matched placebo groups.

 


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Fig 3. . Incidence of serum creatinine (Cr) level change (in milligrams per deciliter) from baseline with 95% confidence intervals for the three aprotinin dosing regimens and matched placebo groups. (inc = increase.)

 


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Fig 4. . Incidence of cerebrovascular accident with 95% confidence intervals for the three aprotinin dosing regimens and matched placebo groups.

 
The observed CABG mortality for half-dose aprotinin in the pooled trials was 5.4% compared with 3.8% with placebo, a 42% increase. Even with pooling, the number of randomized patients is insufficient to detect a significant difference in mortality or myocardial infarction in the half-dose arm. A power analysis indicates that 3,160 patients per group would be required to detect a 40% increase in mortality (from 3.8% to 5.3%). Such a trial remains to be proposed, but would be consistent with trial standards employed to detect differences in outcome for thrombolytics in myocardial infarction or for the suppression of asymptomatic ventricular arrhythmias.

The observed CABG mortality for the pump-prime–only arm was 2.9% compared with 3.2% with placebo. Definite, probable, or possible myocardial infarction was increased, but not significantly, with pump-prime–only aprotinin (17.6%) compared with placebo (14.8%).

The larger number of patients randomized to placebo or high-dose aprotinin, and their more equivalent mortality outcome (2.7% versus 2.8%), leaves us more confident in safety. A power analysis indicates that 422,000 patients would be required to detect such a small increase in mortality.

No clinically or statistically significant trends were noted in renal function, as measured by comparing the incidence of postoperative creatinine level increase of more than 0.5 mg/dL or of more than 2 mg/dL between aprotinin study arms and matched placebo groups.

The intriguing reduction in stroke incidence originally reported by Levy and associates [5] is confirmed by our analysis, achieving statistical significance for the full-dose regimen (1.0% versus 2.4% with placebo; p = 0.027). The mechanism of this reduction remains unexplained.

From these data, we conclude that full-dose aprotinin is safe and effective for indicated patients at risk for bleeding complications (reoperative CABG, primary CABG with impaired coagulation systems, and patients refusing blood and blood products for personal reasons).

We also conclude that more information is required to consider half-dose aprotinin to be safe for any patient. Given the known safety of full-dose aprotinin, and the knowledge that the cost of aprotinin is determined more by market forces than true production cost per kallekrein inhibiting unit, a superior rationale than cost effectiveness should be provided to study more patients. An initial strategy could be the complete study of all previously randomized patients, including long-term follow-up, to increase the number of mortality and morbidity end points for analysis. Such a study would confirm or refute our analysis, and elaborate an appropriate rationale for a study of less than full-dose aprotinin with sufficient size and appropriate patient safeguards. The relationship between aprotinin use and the incidence of cerebrovascular events warrants additional study.

Footnotes

Address reprint requests to Dr Smith, Department of Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Box 3442, Durham, NC 27710.

References

  1. Cosgrove DM, Heric B, Lytle BW, et al. Aprotinin therapy for reoperative myocardial revascularization: a placebo-controlled study. Ann Thorac Surg 1992;54:1031–8.[Abstract]
  2. Sundt TM III, Kouchoukos NT, Saffitz JE, Murphy SF, Wareing TH, Stahl DJ. Renal dysfunction and intravascular coagulation with aprotinin and hypothermic circulatory arrest. Ann Thorac Surg 1993;55:1418–24.[Abstract]
  3. Saffitz JE, Stahl DJ, Sundt TM III, Wareing TH, Kouchoukos NT. Disseminated intravascular coagulation after administration of aprotinin in combination with deep hypothermic circulatory arrest. Am J Cardiol 1993;72:1080–2.[Medline]
  4. Lemmer JH Jr, Dilling EW, Morton JR, et al. Aprotinin for primary coronary artery bypass grafting: a multicenter trial of three dose regimens. Ann Thorac Surg 1996;62:1659–68.
  5. Levy JH, Pifarre R, Schaff HV, et al. A multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of aprotinin for reducing blood loss and the requirement for donor-blood transfusion in patients undergoing repeat coronary artery bypass grafting. Circulation 1995;92:2236–44.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  6. Lemmer JH Jr, Stanford W, Bonney SL, et al. Aprotinin for coronary artery bypass operations: efficacy, safety, and influence on early saphenous vein graft patency. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1994;107:543–53.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Related Article

Aprotinin for Primary Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting: A Multicenter Trial of Three Dose Regimens
John H. Lemmer, Jr, Emery W. Dilling, Jeremy R. Morton, Jeffrey B. Rich, Francis Robicsek, Donald L. Bricker, Charles B. Hantler, Jack G. Copeland, III, John L. Ochsner, Pat O. Daily, Charles W. Whitten, George P. Noon, and Rosemarie Maddi
Ann. Thorac. Surg. 1996 62: 1659-1668. [Abstract] [Full Text]



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