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Catheter-Directed Thrombolysis Vs Anticoagulation in Patients With Acute Intermediate-High-Risk Pulmonary Embolism: The Canary Randomized Clinical Trial Publisher Pubmed



Sadeghipour P1, 2 ; Jenab Y3 ; Moosavi J1 ; Hosseini K3 ; Mohebbi B1, 4 ; Hosseinsabet A3 ; Chatterjee S5, 6 ; Pouraliakbar H7 ; Shirani S3 ; Shishehbor MH8 ; Alizadehasl A4 ; Farrashi M9 ; Rezvani MA7 ; Rafiee F7 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Sadeghipour P1, 2
  2. Jenab Y3
  3. Moosavi J1
  4. Hosseini K3
  5. Mohebbi B1, 4
  6. Hosseinsabet A3
  7. Chatterjee S5, 6
  8. Pouraliakbar H7
  9. Shirani S3
  10. Shishehbor MH8
  11. Alizadehasl A4
  12. Farrashi M9
  13. Rezvani MA7
  14. Rafiee F7
  15. Jalali A3
  16. Rashedi S1, 3
  17. Shafe O1
  18. Giri J10
  19. Monreal M11
  20. Jimenez D12, 13, 14
  21. Lang I15
  22. Maleki M1
  23. Goldhaber SZ16, 17
  24. Krumholz HM18, 19, 20
  25. Piazza G16, 17
  26. Bikdeli B16, 17, 20, 21

Source: JAMA Cardiology Published:2022


Abstract

Importance: The optimal treatment of intermediate-high-risk pulmonary embolism (PE) remains unknown. Objective: To assess the effect of conventional catheter-directed thrombolysis (cCDT) plus anticoagulation vs anticoagulation monotherapy in improving echocardiographic measures of right ventricle (RV) to left ventricle (LV) ratio in acute intermediate-high-risk PE. Design, Setting, and Participants: The Catheter-Directed Thrombolysis vs Anticoagulation in Patients with Acute Intermediate-High-Risk Pulmonary Embolism (CANARY) trial was an open-label, randomized clinical trial of patients with intermediate-high-risk PE, conducted in 2 large cardiovascular centers in Tehran, Iran, between December 22, 2018, through February 2, 2020. Interventions: Patients were randomly assigned to cCDT (alteplase, 0.5 mg/catheter/h for 24 hours) plus heparin vs anticoagulation monotherapy. Main Outcomes and Measures: The proportion of patients with a 3-month echocardiographic RV/LV ratio greater than 0.9, assessed by a core laboratory, was the primary outcome. The proportion of patients with an RV/LV ratio greater than 0.9 at 72 hours after randomization and the 3-month all-cause mortality were among secondary outcomes. Major bleeding (Bleeding Academic Research Consortium type 3 or 5) was the main safety outcome. A clinical events committee, masked to the treatment assignment, adjudicated clinical outcomes. Results: The study was prematurely stopped due to the COVID-19 pandemic after recruiting 94 patients (mean [SD] age, 58.4 [2.5] years; 27 women [29%]), of whom 85 patients completed the 3-month echocardiographic follow-up. Overall, 2 of 46 patients (4.3%) in the cCDT group and 5 of 39 patients (12.8%) in the anticoagulation monotherapy group met the primary outcome (odds ratio [OR], 0.31; 95% CI, 0.06-1.69; P =.24). The median (IQR) 3-month RV/LV ratio was significantly lower with cCDT (0.7 [0.6-0.7]) than with anticoagulation (0.8 [0.7-0.9); P =.01). An RV/LV ratio greater than 0.9 at 72 hours after randomization was observed in fewer patients treated with cCDT (13 of 48 [27.0%]) than anticoagulation (24 of 46 [52.1%]; OR, 0.34; 95% CI, 0.14-0.80; P =.01). Fewer patients assigned to cCDT experienced a 3-month composite of death or RV/LV greater than 0.9 (2 of 48 [4.3%] vs 8 of 46 [17.3%]; OR, 0.20; 95% CI, 0.04-1.03; P =.048). One case of nonfatal major gastrointestinal bleeding occurred in the cCDT group. Conclusions and Relevance: This prematurely terminated randomized clinical trial of patients with intermediate-high-risk PE was hypothesis-generating for improvement in some efficacy outcomes and acceptable rate of major bleeding for cCDT compared with anticoagulation monotherapy and provided support for a definitive clinical outcomes trial. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05172115. © 2022 Authors. All rights reserved.
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