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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Internal Medicine

Journal Articles

2015

Anticoagulants;; child;; clinical trial;; pilot study;; reliability and validity;; thrombosis

Articles 1 - 1 of 1

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial On Duration Of Therapy For Thrombosis In Children And Young Adults (The Kids-Dott Trial): Pilot/Feasibility Phase Findings, N. A. Goldenberg, T. Abshire, P. J. Blatchford, L. Z. Fenton, J. L. Halperin, W. R. Hiatt, C. M. Kessler, J. M. Kittelson, A. C. Spyropoulos, S. Schulman, +4 Additional Authors Jan 2015

Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial On Duration Of Therapy For Thrombosis In Children And Young Adults (The Kids-Dott Trial): Pilot/Feasibility Phase Findings, N. A. Goldenberg, T. Abshire, P. J. Blatchford, L. Z. Fenton, J. L. Halperin, W. R. Hiatt, C. M. Kessler, J. M. Kittelson, A. C. Spyropoulos, S. Schulman, +4 Additional Authors

Journal Articles

BACKGROUND: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) on pediatric venous thromboembolism (VTE) treatment have been challenged by unsubstantiated design assumptions and/or poor accrual. Pilot/feasibility (P/F) studies are critical to future RCT success. METHODS: The Kids-DOTT trial is a multicenter RCT investigating non-inferiority of a 6-week (shortened) versus 3-month (conventional) duration of anticoagulation in patients aged < 21 years with provoked venous thrombosis. Primary efficacy and safety endpoints are symptomatic recurrent VTE at 1 year and anticoagulant-related, clinically relevant bleeding. In the P/F phase, 100 participants were enrolled in an open, blinded-endpoint, parallel-cohort RCT design. RESULTS: No eligibility violations or randomization errors occurred. Of the enrolled patients, 69% were randomized, 3% missed the randomization window, and 28% were followed in prespecified observational cohorts for completely occlusive thrombosis or persistent antiphospholipid antibodies. Retention at 1 year was 82%. Interobserver agreement between local and blinded central determination of venous occlusion by imaging at 6 weeks after diagnosis was strong (k-statistic = 0.75; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.48-1.0). The primary efficacy and safety event rates were 3.3% (95% CI 0.3-11.5%) and 1.4% (95% CI 0.03-7.4%). CONCLUSIONS: The P/F phase of the Kids-DOTT trial has demonstrated the validity of vascular imaging findings of occlusion as a randomization criterion, and defined randomization, retention and endpoint rates to inform the fully powered RCT.