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$10 Million trial tests treatment for Leg Blood Clots
Newswise — A $10 million,
government-funded, multicenter clinical
trial of an aggressive treatment for blood
clots in the leg known as deep vein
thrombosis (DVT) will be led by researchers
at Washington University School of Medicine
in St. Louis.
Approximately 250,000 U.S.
patients are diagnosed with new DVTs every
year. Current clinical standards call for
the patients to be treated with blood
thinning agents, which prevent clot
migration and formation of new clots but do
not break up the original clot.
Clinicians recently have
realized the original clot often leads to
serious, difficult-to-treat, long-term
complications.
Suresh Vedantham, M.D., who
is a Washington University interventional
radiologist at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, is
the national principal investigator for the
ATTRACT (Acute Venous Thrombosis: Thrombus
Removal with Adjunctive Catheter-Directed
Thrombolysis) Trial, which will test the use
of catheter-mounted technology that can both
chew up DVTs and directly administer
clot-busting drugs.
The trial is funded by the
National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute,
part of the National Institutes of Health.
"This is the first
large-scale test of these new techniques,
and the potential to change clinical DVT
practice on a large scale is very exciting,"
says Vedantham, associate professor of
radiology and surgery at the Mallinckrodt
Institute of Radiology at Washington
University.
"If the trial is
positive, it will alter the paradigm to say
we don't just prevent the next clot, we've
got to also remove the existing clot first."
The initial symptoms of DVT
are pain and swelling in the affected leg.
Associated risk factors include surgery or
trauma to the leg, genetic factors,
immobilization, hormonal therapies and
cancer. DVTs are more common in older
patients but also can occur in childhood and
throughout the lifespan.
The most immediate danger
from a DVT is the clot breaking loose and
moving to the lungs, a condition called
pulmonary embolism that kills approximately
100,000 people annually in the United
States.
Complications from the
continued presence of the clot, known as
post-thrombotic syndrome (PTS), occur in 50
percent of all DVT patients.
"PTS causes long-term chronic
pain, swelling, venous ulcers and difficulty
walking," Vedantham says.
"This often leads to
disability, is very costly and difficult to
treat and significantly impairs quality of
life. By removing the clot when it is first
diagnosed, we can prevent permanent damage
to the leg veins and thereby prevent PTS."
Physicians tested
clot-busting drugs on DVTs as early as the
1970s, but the approach was deemed unsafe
because general administration of the drugs
incurred too much risk of bleeding.
Radiologists can now pinpoint the location
of DVTs with X-rays and an injectable dye.
Recently developed catheter
technology makes it possible not only to
deliver clot-busting drugs directly to the
DVT but also to mash the clot to help break
it up and ensure better distribution of the
drugs.
"One
such technology uses a wire in the catheter
turned via a small handheld motor to break
up the clot; others use ultrasound.
"The goal is to provide a
safer, quicker and much more effective
approach to treatment," Vedantham says.
Plans call for 692 patients
to be enrolled in the trial at 28 clinical
centers nationwide, but the total number of
clinical centers involved in the trial may
increase to 40. Data from the trial will be
analyzed at a data-coordinating center at
McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario.
Washington University School
of Medicine's 2,100 employed and volunteer
faculty physicians also are the medical
staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis
Children's hospitals.
The School of Medicine is one
of the leading medical research, teaching
and patient care institutions in the nation,
currently ranked third in the nation by U.S.
News & World Report.
Through its affiliations with
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's
hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked
to BJC HealthCare.
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