Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1186/S13063-016-1271-Y
Title: Room temperature stable carbetocin for the prevention of postpartum haemorrhage during the third stage of labour in women delivering vaginally: Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Authors: Widmer, M
Piaggio, G
Abdel-Aleem, H
Carroli, G
Chong, Y.-S 
Coomarasamy, A
Fawole, B
Goudar, S
Justus Hofmeyr, G
Lumbiganon, P
Mugerwa, K
Nguyen, T.M.H
Qureshi, Z
Souza, J.P
Gülmezoglu, A.M
Keywords: carbetocin
oxytocin
carbetocin
oxytocic agent
oxytocin
Article
clinical effectiveness
clinical evaluation
clinical protocol
controlled study
disease severity
double blind procedure
drug efficacy
drug safety
drug tolerability
female
human
labor stage 3
major clinical study
multicenter study
operative blood loss
postpartum hemorrhage
risk assessment
risk factor
room temperature
unspecified side effect
vaginal delivery
adverse effects
analogs and derivatives
birth
chemistry
clinical trial
drug formulation
drug stability
methodology
obstetric delivery
postpartum hemorrhage
pregnancy
randomized controlled trial
temperature
time factor
treatment outcome
Clinical Protocols
Delivery, Obstetric
Double-Blind Method
Drug Compounding
Drug Stability
Female
Humans
Labor Stage, Third
Oxytocics
Oxytocin
Parturition
Postpartum Hemorrhage
Pregnancy
Research Design
Risk Factors
Temperature
Time Factors
Treatment Outcome
Issue Date: 2016
Citation: Widmer, M, Piaggio, G, Abdel-Aleem, H, Carroli, G, Chong, Y.-S, Coomarasamy, A, Fawole, B, Goudar, S, Justus Hofmeyr, G, Lumbiganon, P, Mugerwa, K, Nguyen, T.M.H, Qureshi, Z, Souza, J.P, Gülmezoglu, A.M (2016). Room temperature stable carbetocin for the prevention of postpartum haemorrhage during the third stage of labour in women delivering vaginally: Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial. Trials 17 (1) : 143. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1186/S13063-016-1271-Y
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: BBackground: Postpartum haemorrhage (PPH) is the leading cause of maternal mortality in low-income countries and contributes to nearly a quarter of maternal deaths globally. The current available interventions for prevention of postpartum haemorrhage, oxytocin and carbetocin, are limited by their need for refrigeration to maintain potency, as the ability to maintain a cold chain across the drug distribution and storage network is inconsistent, thus restricting their use in countries with the highest burden of maternal mortality. We describe a randomized, double-blind non-inferiority trial comparing a newly developed room temperature stable formulation of carbetocin to the standard intervention (oxytocin) for the prevention of PPH after vaginal birth. Methods/design: Approximately 30,000 women delivering vaginally will be recruited across 22 centres in 10 countries. The primary objectives are to evaluate the non-inferiority of room temperature stable carbetocin (100 μg intramuscular) versus oxytocin (10 IU intramuscular) in the prevention of PPH and severe PPH after vaginal birth. The primary endpoints are blood loss ≥500 mL or the use of additional uterotonics (composite endpoint required by drug regulatory authorities) and blood loss ≥1,000 mL (WHO requirement). Non-inferiority will be assessed using a two-sided 95 % confidence interval for the relative risk of the above endpoints for room temperature stable carbetocin versus oxytocin. The upper limit of the two-sided 95 % confidence interval for the relative risk for the composite endpoint of blood loss ≥500 mL or the use of additional uterotonics, and for the endpoint of blood loss ≥1,000 mL, will be compared to a non-inferiority margin of 1.16 and 1.23, respectively. If the upper limit is below the corresponding margin, non-inferiority will have been demonstrated. The safety analysis will include all women receiving treatment. Safety and tolerability will be assessed by a review of adverse events, by conducting inferential testing with significance levels for between-group comparisons. Discussion: If the results of the study show that room temperature stable carbetocin is a safe and effective alternative to oxytocin, this could have a substantial impact on the prevention of postpartum haemorrhage and maternal survival worldwide. @ 2016 Widmer et al.
Source Title: Trials
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/179954
ISSN: 17456215
DOI: 10.1186/S13063-016-1271-Y
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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