BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth (Jan 2021)

A multi-centre, open label, randomised, parallel-group, superiority Trial to compare the efficacy of URsodeoxycholic acid with RIFampicin in the management of women with severe early onset Intrahepatic Cholestasis of pregnancy: the TURRIFIC randomised trial

  • William M. Hague,
  • Leonie Callaway,
  • Jennifer Chambers,
  • Lucy Chappell,
  • Suzette Coat,
  • Jiska de Haan-Jebbink,
  • Marloes Dekker,
  • Peter Dixon,
  • Jodie Dodd,
  • Maria Fuller,
  • Sanne Gordijn,
  • Dorothy Graham,
  • Oskari Heikinheimo,
  • Annemarie Hennessy,
  • Risto Kaaja,
  • Teck Yee Khong,
  • Laura Lampio,
  • Jennie Louise,
  • Angela Makris,
  • Corey Markus,
  • Hanns-Ulrich Marschall,
  • Philippa Middleton,
  • Ben W. Mol,
  • Jonathan Morris,
  • John P. Newnham,
  • Caroline Ovadia,
  • Michael Peek,
  • Antonia Shand,
  • Michael Stark,
  • Jim Thornton,
  • Susanna Timonen,
  • Susan Walker,
  • David Warrilow,
  • Catherine Williamson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-020-03481-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Background Severe early onset (less than 34 weeks gestation) intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy (ICP) affects 0.1% of pregnant women in Australia and is associated with a 3-fold increased risk of stillbirth, fetal hypoxia and compromise, spontaneous preterm birth, as well as increased frequencies of pre-eclampsia and gestational diabetes. ICP is often familial and overlaps with other cholestatic disorders. Treatment options for ICP are not well established, although there are limited data to support the use of ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) to relieve pruritus, the main symptom. Rifampicin, a widely used antibiotic including in pregnant women, is effective in reducing pruritus in non-pregnancy cholestasis and has been used as a supplement to UDCA in severe ICP. Many women with ICP are electively delivered preterm, although there are no randomised data to support this approach. Methods We have initiated an international multicentre randomised clinical trial to compare the clinical efficacy of rifampicin tablets (300 mg bd) with that of UDCA tablets (up to 2000 mg daily) in reducing pruritus in women with ICP, using visual pruritus scores as a measuring tool. Discussion Our study will be the first to examine the outcomes of treatment specifically in the severe early onset form of ICP, comparing “standard” UDCA therapy with rifampicin, and so be able to provide for the first-time high-quality evidence for use of rifampicin in severe ICP. It will also allow an assessment of feasibility of a future trial to test whether elective early delivery in severe ICP is beneficial. Trial identifiers Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registration Number (ANZCTR): 12618000332224p (29/08/2018). HREC No: HREC/18/WCHN/36. EudraCT number: 2018–004011-44. IRAS: 272398. NHMRC registration: APP1152418 and APP117853.

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