BMJ Open Respiratory Research (Jan 2021)

Randomised trial of first-line bronchial artery embolisation for non-severe haemoptysis of mild abundance

  • Benjamin Planquette,
  • Vincent Labbe,
  • Tabassome Simon,
  • Alexandra Rousseau,
  • Jacques Cadranel,
  • Antoine Khalil,
  • Emmanuel Bergot,
  • Gérard Zalcman,
  • Guy Meyer,
  • Philippe Cluzel,
  • Vincent Jounieaux,
  • Alexandre Demoule,
  • Muriel Fartoukh,
  • Aude Gibelin,
  • Olivier Sanchez,
  • THOMAS SIMILOWSKI,
  • Claire Andrejak,
  • Valérie Chabbert,
  • Michel Djibré,
  • Sophie Tuffet,
  • Cendrine Godet,
  • Sandrine Pontier-Marchandise,
  • Julien Mayaux,
  • Marc Sapoval,
  • Vincent Le Pennec,
  • Marie-France Carette,
  • Clarisse Blayau,
  • Guillaume Voiriot,
  • Alexandre Duguet,
  • Hélène Prodanovik,
  • Guillaume Briend,
  • Anne Roche,
  • Costantino Del Giudice,
  • Olivier Pellerin,
  • Marie-Pierre Revel,
  • Patrick Courtheoux,
  • Jean Claude Meurice,
  • Elise Antone,
  • Alexandre Remond

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjresp-2021-000949
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1

Abstract

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Background Whereas first-line bronchial artery embolisation (BAE) is considered standard of care for the management of severe haemoptysis, it is unknown whether this approach is warranted for non-severe haemoptysis.Research question To assess the efficacy on bleeding control and the safety of first-line BAE in non-severe haemoptysis of mild abundance.Study design and methods This multicentre, randomised controlled open-label trial enrolled adult patients without major comorbid condition and having mild haemoptysis (onset <72 hours, 100–200 mL estimated bleeding amount), related to a systemic arterial mechanism. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to BAE associated with medical therapy or to medical therapy alone.Results Bleeding recurrence at day 30 after randomisation (primary outcome) occurred in 4 (11.8%) of 34 patients in the BAE strategy and 17 (44.7%) of 38 patients in the medical strategy (difference −33%; 95% CI −13.8% to −52.1%, p=0.002). The 90-day bleeding recurrence-free survival rates were 91.2% (95% CI 75.1% to 97.1%) and 60.2% (95% CI 42.9% to 73.8%), respectively (HR=0.19, 95% CI 0.05 to 0.67, p=0.01). No death occurred during follow-up and no bleeding recurrence needed surgery.Four adverse events (one major with systemic emboli) occurred during hospitalisation, all in the BAE strategy (11.8% vs 0%; difference 11.8%, 95% CI 0.9 to 22.6, p=0.045); all eventually resolved.Conclusion In non-severe haemoptysis of mild abundance, BAE associated with medical therapy had a superior efficacy for preventing bleeding recurrences at 30 and 90 days, as compared with medical therapy alone. However, it was associated with a higher rate of adverse events.Trial registration number NCT01278199