BMJ Open Gastroenterology (Jul 2024)

Study protocol for a Randomised controlled trial of EArly transjugular intrahepatiC porTosystemic stent–shunt in Acute Variceal Bleeding (REACT-AVB trial)

  • ,
  • Faisal Khan,
  • Simon Travis,
  • Dhiraj Tripathi,
  • Sue Jowett,
  • Gemma Slinn,
  • Steven Masson,
  • Andrew King,
  • Imran Patanwala,
  • Ameet Dhar,
  • Ruairi Lynch,
  • Adrian Stanley,
  • Hamish Ireland,
  • Peter Hayes,
  • Robert Driver,
  • Laura Harrison,
  • Tom Pembroke,
  • David Patch,
  • Dominic Yu,
  • Janisha Patel,
  • James Maurice,
  • Matthew Armstrong,
  • Joanna Leithead,
  • Matthew J Armstrong,
  • Nicholas Roslund,
  • Mandy Lomax,
  • Homoyon Mehrzad,
  • Richard J Aspinall,
  • Teik Choon See,
  • Fidan Yousuf,
  • Naaventhan Palaniyappan,
  • Elizabeth Brettell,
  • Jeremy Cobbold,
  • Roger McCorry,
  • Emily Lam,
  • Jayshri Shah,
  • Evangelia Fatourou,
  • Edward Britton,
  • Jude Morris,
  • Catherine Moakes,
  • Alisha Maher,
  • Sukhwant Sehmi,
  • Syed Alam,
  • Victoria J Appleby,
  • Jagadish Nagaraj

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgast-2023-001314
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1

Abstract

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Introduction In liver cirrhosis, acute variceal bleeding (AVB) is associated with a 1-year mortality rate of up to 40%. Data on early or pre-emptive transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic stent–shunt (TIPSS) in AVB is inconclusive and may not reflect current management strategies. Randomised controlled trial of EArly transjugular intrahepatiC porTosystemic stent–shunt in AVB (REACT-AVB) aims to investigate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of early TIPSS in patients with cirrhosis and AVB after initial bleeding control.Methods and analysis REACT-AVB is a multicentre, randomised controlled, open-label, superiority, two-arm, parallel-group trial with an internal pilot. The two interventions allocated randomly 1:1 are early TIPSS within 4 days of diagnostic endoscopy or secondary prophylaxis with endoscopic therapy in combination with non-selective beta blockers. Patients aged ≥18 years with cirrhosis and Child-Pugh Score 7–13 presenting with AVB with endoscopic haemostasis are eligible for inclusion. The primary outcome is transplant-free survival at 1 year post randomisation. Secondary endpoints include transplant-free survival at 6 weeks, rebleeding, serious adverse events, other complications of cirrhosis, Child-Pugh and Model For End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) scores at 6 and 12 months, health-related quality of life, use of healthcare resources, cost-effectiveness and use of cross-over therapies. The sample size is 294 patients over a 4-year recruitment period, across 30 hospitals in the UK.Ethics and dissemination Research ethics committee of National Health Service has approved REACT-AVB (reference number: 23/WM/0085). The results will be submitted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal. A lay summary will also be emailed or posted to participants before publication.Trial registration number ISRCTN85274829; protocol version 3.0, 1 July 2023.