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Tranxemic Acid and Vitamin K Injection to Control Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding in Cirrhotic Patients
Sponsor: Tanta University
Summary
The goal of this randomized controlled clinical trial is to evaluate the efficacy of Tranexamic acid and vitamin K injection versus placebo in control of upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB) in Egyptian cirrhotic patients. Researchers will compare the bleeding and mortality rates (at 5 days and 6 weeks post endoscopic intervention for UGIB) between patients receiving tranxemic acid and vitamin K injection and patients receiving placebo. Participants presenting with variceal bleeding will be randomly assigned to receive tranexamic acid (1 g loading dose followed by 3 g maintenance dose over 24- 48 hours) and intravenous injection of 10 mg daily of vitamin K for 24-48 h or matching placebo group receiving IV saline. Intervention will be carried out besides the recommended initial management of airway management, hemodynamic stabilization, octreotide analogue, PPI, antibiotics, and endoscopy. Follow-up All patients will be kept at the hospital for at least 5 days from the index bleed and will be discharged if no other reason was observed to keep them at the hospital. The rate of rebleeding, need for blood transfusion, hospital stay, adverse effects, and mortality rate were evaluated and compared across the groups. At discharge, all patients will be started on nonselective beta-blockers if there was no contraindication. They will be given instructions to attend to hospital if they noticed any melena or hematemesis. Second follow-up after 6 weeks for the rebleeding rate and mortality related to bleeding rate.
Official title: Efficacy of Tranexamic Acid and Vitamin k Injection in Control of Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding in Egyptian Cirrhotic Patients: A Randomized Controlled Study
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
194
Start Date
2024-12-02
Completion Date
2025-12-30
Last Updated
2025-03-18
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Tranexamic Acid and vitamin K
Tranxemic acid (1 g loading dose followed by 3 g maintenance dose over 24- 48 hours) and intravenous injection (10 mg daily of vitamin K for 24-48 h) along with initial management of airway management, hemodynamic stabilization, octreotide analogue, PPI, antibiotics, and endoscopy to control UGIB in cirrhotic patients. Patients will be followed up after 5 days and 6 weeks to assess the rate of rebleeding, need for blood transfusion, hospital stay, adverse effects, and mortality rate.
Placebo
Intravenous saline over 24-48 hours along with initial management of airway management, hemodynamic stabilization, octreotide analogue, PPI, antibiotics, and endoscopy to control UGIB in cirrhotic patients. Patients will be followed up after 5 days and 6 weeks to assess the rate of rebleeding, need for blood transfusion, hospital stay, adverse effects, and mortality rate.
Locations (1)
Tanta University Hospitals
Tanta, Gharbyea, Egypt