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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT06572917
PHASE2

Single-dose Prophylactic INdomethacin in Extremely Preterm Infants

Sponsor: University of British Columbia

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

In Canada, about 900 babies each year are born very early (\<26 weeks of gestation) and have a high chance of dying or having a serious bleed in the brain. Families of these extremely preterm babies consider preventing severe brain bleeding as critical to their child's health and well-being. A medicine called indomethacin, when given intravenously in 3-doses, is known to reduce severe brain bleeding. But use of this drug is variable among clinicians working in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) due to (a) its side effects on the gut; (b) possible harm when used with other medications; (c) a notion that despite reducing brain bleeds, the child's long-term brain development is not improved. Emerging evidence suggests that a single low-dose indomethacin regimen may be equally effective in reducing severe brain bleeding as compared to a traditional 3-dose regimen. The investigators propose a blinded randomized controlled trial, a study design where babies born \<26 weeks will be randomly assigned within 12 hours of birth to either a single dose of intravenous indomethacin or similar looking placebo in the form a saline solution. The study will test if a single dose indomethacin regimen is effective in improving survival of these babies without the devastating complication of severe brain bleeding. In this study the care providers and researchers will be unaware as to which baby receives indomethacin and which baby receives placebo to ensure no one's expectations or biases can influence the results. The investigators will conduct the study in multiple NICUs across Canada, the United States and Australia in 2 phases: First, an internal pilot phase that will enroll 104 babies born \<26 weeks or \<750 g birth weight over a period of 1 year. If the investigators are successful in achieving their target enrolment in the pilot phase, they will move on to the second phase and continue enrollment up to a total of 500 babies born \<26 weeks or \<750 g birth weight over a period of 3 years. The total of 500 babies will include the 104 babies enrolled in the first phase of the study. This study will help the investigators determine in the most unbiased way whether a single dose of indomethacin given immediately after birth in the smallest babies born \<26 weeks of gestation can safely and effectively reduce severe brain bleeding.

Official title: Single-dose Prophylactic INdomethacin in Extremely Preterm Infants - A Multicenter Randomized Blinded Placebo-Controlled Trial (the SPIN RCT)

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

0 Hours - 12 Hours

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

500

Start Date

2025-11-01

Completion Date

2031-03-31

Last Updated

2025-09-03

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DRUG

Indomethacin

Single dose of 0.1 mg/kg dose intravenous indomethacin as a slow infusion over 20 mins

DRUG

Placebo

Single dose of intravenous normal saline placebo as a slow infusion over 20 mins

Locations (15)

Kaiser Roseville

Roseville, California, United States

UC Davis Health

Sacramento, California, United States

University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States

Texas Health Harris Methodist Hospital Fort Worth

Fort Worth, Texas, United States

Welcome to Baylor Scott & White Health

Fort Worth, Texas, United States

Mercy Hospital for Women

Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Monash Children's Hospital

Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Foothills Medical Center & Alberta Children's Hospital

Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Royal Alexandra Hospital

Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

Royal Columbian Hospital

New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada

BC Women's Hospital

Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

IWK Health

Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Montreal Children's Hospital

Montreal, Quebec, Canada

CHU de Quebec

Québec, Quebec, Canada