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Intensive care medicine · Aug 2023
Randomized Controlled TrialSafety and efficacy of artesunate treatment in severely injured patients with traumatic hemorrhage. The TOP-ART randomized clinical trial.
- Joanna M Shepherd, Jennifer Ross, Lourdes Anton, Claire Rourke, Adam R Brentnall, Joel Tarning, Nicholas J White, Christoph Thiemermann, and Karim Brohi.
- Centre for Trauma Sciences, The Blizard Institute, Queen Mary University of London, London, E1 4AT, UK. j.m.shepherd@qmul.ac.uk.
- Intensive Care Med. 2023 Aug 1; 49 (8): 922933922-933.
PurposeThis study aimed at determining whether intravenous artesunate is safe and effective in reducing multiple organ dysfunction syndrome in trauma patients with major hemorrhage.MethodsTOP-ART, a randomized, blinded, placebo-controlled, phase IIa trial, was conducted at a London major trauma center in adult trauma patients who activated the major hemorrhage protocol. Participants received artesunate or placebo (2:1 randomization ratio) as an intravenous bolus dose (2.4 mg/kg or 4.8 mg/kg) within 4 h of injury. The safety outcome was the 28-day serious adverse event (SAE) rate. The primary efficacy outcome was the 48 h sequential organ failure assessment (SOFA) score. The per-protocol recruitment target was 105 patients.ResultsThe trial was terminated after enrolment of 90 patients because of safety concerns. Eighty-three participants received artesunate (n = 54) or placebo (n = 29) and formed the safety population and 75 met per-protocol criteria (48 artesunate, 27 placebo). Admission characteristics were similar between groups (overall 88% male, median age 29 years, median injury severity score 22), except participants who received artesunate were more shocked (median base deficit 9 vs. 4.7, p = 0.042). SAEs occurred in 17 artesunate participants (31%) vs. 5 who received placebo (17%). Venous thromboembolic events (VTE) occurred in 9 artesunate participants (17%) vs. 1 who received placebo (3%). Superiority of artesunate was not supported by the 48 h SOFA score (median 5.5 artesunate vs. 4 placebo, p = 0.303) or any of the trial's secondary endpoints.ConclusionAmong critically ill trauma patients, artesunate is unlikely to improve organ dysfunction and might be associated with a higher VTE rate.© 2023. The Author(s).
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