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Dutch randomized trial comparing standard catheter-directed thrombolysis versus Ultrasound-accElerated Thrombolysis for thromboembolic infrainguinal disease (DUET): design and rationale

BACKGROUND: The use of thrombolytic therapy in the treatment of thrombosed infrainguinal native arteries and bypass grafts has increased over the years. Main limitation of this treatment modality, however, is the occurrence of bleeding complications. Low intensity ultrasound (US) has been shown to a...

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Autores principales: Schrijver, A Marjolein, Reijnen, Michel MPJ, van Oostayen, Jacques A, Nolthenius, Rudolf PJ Tutein, van der Valk, Pieter HM, Hoksbergen, Arjan WJ, Lely, Rutger J, Fioole, Bram, Vroegindeweij, Dammis, van Leersum, Marc, de Vries, Jean-Paul PM
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3033836/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21255459
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-12-20
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author Schrijver, A Marjolein
Reijnen, Michel MPJ
van Oostayen, Jacques A
Nolthenius, Rudolf PJ Tutein
van der Valk, Pieter HM
Hoksbergen, Arjan WJ
Lely, Rutger J
Fioole, Bram
Vroegindeweij, Dammis
van Leersum, Marc
de Vries, Jean-Paul PM
author_facet Schrijver, A Marjolein
Reijnen, Michel MPJ
van Oostayen, Jacques A
Nolthenius, Rudolf PJ Tutein
van der Valk, Pieter HM
Hoksbergen, Arjan WJ
Lely, Rutger J
Fioole, Bram
Vroegindeweij, Dammis
van Leersum, Marc
de Vries, Jean-Paul PM
author_sort Schrijver, A Marjolein
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The use of thrombolytic therapy in the treatment of thrombosed infrainguinal native arteries and bypass grafts has increased over the years. Main limitation of this treatment modality, however, is the occurrence of bleeding complications. Low intensity ultrasound (US) has been shown to accelerate enzymatic thrombolysis, thereby reducing therapy time. So far, no randomized trials have investigated the application of US-accelerated thrombolysis in the treatment of thrombosed infra-inguinal native arteries or bypass grafts. The DUET study (Dutch randomized trial comparing standard catheter-directed thrombolysis versus Ultrasound-accElerated Thrombolysis for thrombo-embolic infrainguinal disease) is designed to assess whether US-accelerated thrombolysis will reduce therapy time significantly compared with standard catheter-directed thrombolysis. METHODS/DESIGN: Sixty adult patients with recently (between 1 and 7 weeks) thrombosed infrainguinal native arteries or bypass grafts with acute limb ischemia class I or IIa, according to the Rutherford classification for acute ischemia, will be randomly allocated to either standard thrombolysis (group A) or US-accelerated thrombolysis (group B). Patients will be recruited from 5 teaching hospitals in the Netherlands during a 2-year period. The primary endpoint is the duration of catheter-directed thrombolysis needed for uninterrupted flow in the thrombosed infrainguinal native artery or bypass graft, with outflow through at least 1 crural artery. DISCUSSION: The DUET study is a randomized controlled trial that will provide evidence of whether US-accelerated thrombolysis will significantly reduce therapy time in patients with recently thrombosed infrainguinal native arteries or bypass grafts, without an increase in complications. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN72676102
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spelling pubmed-30338362011-02-05 Dutch randomized trial comparing standard catheter-directed thrombolysis versus Ultrasound-accElerated Thrombolysis for thromboembolic infrainguinal disease (DUET): design and rationale Schrijver, A Marjolein Reijnen, Michel MPJ van Oostayen, Jacques A Nolthenius, Rudolf PJ Tutein van der Valk, Pieter HM Hoksbergen, Arjan WJ Lely, Rutger J Fioole, Bram Vroegindeweij, Dammis van Leersum, Marc de Vries, Jean-Paul PM Trials Study Protocol BACKGROUND: The use of thrombolytic therapy in the treatment of thrombosed infrainguinal native arteries and bypass grafts has increased over the years. Main limitation of this treatment modality, however, is the occurrence of bleeding complications. Low intensity ultrasound (US) has been shown to accelerate enzymatic thrombolysis, thereby reducing therapy time. So far, no randomized trials have investigated the application of US-accelerated thrombolysis in the treatment of thrombosed infra-inguinal native arteries or bypass grafts. The DUET study (Dutch randomized trial comparing standard catheter-directed thrombolysis versus Ultrasound-accElerated Thrombolysis for thrombo-embolic infrainguinal disease) is designed to assess whether US-accelerated thrombolysis will reduce therapy time significantly compared with standard catheter-directed thrombolysis. METHODS/DESIGN: Sixty adult patients with recently (between 1 and 7 weeks) thrombosed infrainguinal native arteries or bypass grafts with acute limb ischemia class I or IIa, according to the Rutherford classification for acute ischemia, will be randomly allocated to either standard thrombolysis (group A) or US-accelerated thrombolysis (group B). Patients will be recruited from 5 teaching hospitals in the Netherlands during a 2-year period. The primary endpoint is the duration of catheter-directed thrombolysis needed for uninterrupted flow in the thrombosed infrainguinal native artery or bypass graft, with outflow through at least 1 crural artery. DISCUSSION: The DUET study is a randomized controlled trial that will provide evidence of whether US-accelerated thrombolysis will significantly reduce therapy time in patients with recently thrombosed infrainguinal native arteries or bypass grafts, without an increase in complications. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN72676102 BioMed Central 2011-01-23 /pmc/articles/PMC3033836/ /pubmed/21255459 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-12-20 Text en Copyright ©2011 Schrijver et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Schrijver, A Marjolein
Reijnen, Michel MPJ
van Oostayen, Jacques A
Nolthenius, Rudolf PJ Tutein
van der Valk, Pieter HM
Hoksbergen, Arjan WJ
Lely, Rutger J
Fioole, Bram
Vroegindeweij, Dammis
van Leersum, Marc
de Vries, Jean-Paul PM
Dutch randomized trial comparing standard catheter-directed thrombolysis versus Ultrasound-accElerated Thrombolysis for thromboembolic infrainguinal disease (DUET): design and rationale
title Dutch randomized trial comparing standard catheter-directed thrombolysis versus Ultrasound-accElerated Thrombolysis for thromboembolic infrainguinal disease (DUET): design and rationale
title_full Dutch randomized trial comparing standard catheter-directed thrombolysis versus Ultrasound-accElerated Thrombolysis for thromboembolic infrainguinal disease (DUET): design and rationale
title_fullStr Dutch randomized trial comparing standard catheter-directed thrombolysis versus Ultrasound-accElerated Thrombolysis for thromboembolic infrainguinal disease (DUET): design and rationale
title_full_unstemmed Dutch randomized trial comparing standard catheter-directed thrombolysis versus Ultrasound-accElerated Thrombolysis for thromboembolic infrainguinal disease (DUET): design and rationale
title_short Dutch randomized trial comparing standard catheter-directed thrombolysis versus Ultrasound-accElerated Thrombolysis for thromboembolic infrainguinal disease (DUET): design and rationale
title_sort dutch randomized trial comparing standard catheter-directed thrombolysis versus ultrasound-accelerated thrombolysis for thromboembolic infrainguinal disease (duet): design and rationale
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3033836/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21255459
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-12-20
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