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Prophylactic exchange transfusion in sickle cell disease pregnancy: a TAPS2 feasibility randomized controlled trial

Prophylactic exchange transfusion in sickle cell disease pregnancy: a TAPS2 feasibility randomized controlled trial
Prophylactic exchange transfusion in sickle cell disease pregnancy: a TAPS2 feasibility randomized controlled trial
Serial prophylactic exchange blood transfusion (SPEBT) is increasingly used in sickle cell disease (SCD) pregnancy, despite a lack of robust evidence. The Transfusion Antenatally in Pregnant Women with Sickle Cell Disease (TAPS2) study assessed the feasibility and acceptability of conducting a definitive randomized controlled trial of SPEBT (intervention) vs standard care (control) in this population. Women aged ≥18 years with SCD, between 6+0 and 18+6 weeks of singleton gestation, were randomized 1:1 every 6 -10 weeks throughout pregnancy in 7 hospitals in England. The main outcomes were recruitment rate (primary outcome), acceptability, and retention. Secondary outcomes were safety and maternal/infant outcomes. In total, 194 women were screened over 42 months (extended because of the pandemic), 88 were eligible, and 35 (39.8%) consented to participate; 18 participants were randomized to intervention, and 17 to control. Follow-up data were collected on all participants. Twelve patients in the intervention group received at least 1 SPEBT, of these, 11 received ≥3. The remaining patient was withdrawn from SPEBT because of transfusion reaction. Sixteen control participants required at least 1 transfusion. There were no statistically significant differences in maternal, infant, and postnatal outcomes. A trend toward a lower incidence of vaso-occlusive crisis, preterm delivery, and improved birthweight was observed in the intervention. The study achieved satisfactory recruitment and retention, confirming its acceptability to participants. TAPS2 demonstrates that it is feasible to perform a definitive international trial of SPEBT in SCD pregnancy. These trials were registered at www.ClinicalTrials.gov as #NCT03975894 and International Standard Randomized Controlled Trial Number (www.isrctn.com; #ISRCTN52684446).
Sickle cell disease, pregnancy, feasibility RCT, Transfusion
2473-9529
4359-4369
Oteng-Ntim, Eugene
a40ccf44-b622-4c4c-aa93-bbcc642b5eb3
Oakley, Laura L.
905389ac-f299-4fbe-ac85-7e2eb4e9fd30
Robinson, Vicky
eb113a59-37c0-4349-92dc-5acf9d22341a
Brien, Sarah
4e8e97cd-7bc3-4efd-857e-20790040b80f
Joseph, Jeannine
d7100567-a846-4991-89e3-8234b0fc567a
Sharif, Joseph
48723973-cf32-4f4a-be20-4c9889726551
McCabe, Laura
c78f225f-1fb6-4644-9750-d929b510b058
Thompson, Hilary
72d70267-f6c9-4e67-97ed-73b161ae2430
Awogbade, Moji
dfbbb5b8-b30b-4de9-853d-8daa8a0c57b6
Johns, Jemma
e0a360ec-b270-478d-a3d3-4029d5664545
Brunetta, Denise M.
9312cf9e-834f-424f-afb3-0a89c77b651d
Seed, Paul T.
d3eda3f4-0e4c-4c17-9efd-dc75b583e79a
Oteng-Ntim, Eugene
a40ccf44-b622-4c4c-aa93-bbcc642b5eb3
Oakley, Laura L.
905389ac-f299-4fbe-ac85-7e2eb4e9fd30
Robinson, Vicky
eb113a59-37c0-4349-92dc-5acf9d22341a
Brien, Sarah
4e8e97cd-7bc3-4efd-857e-20790040b80f
Joseph, Jeannine
d7100567-a846-4991-89e3-8234b0fc567a
Sharif, Joseph
48723973-cf32-4f4a-be20-4c9889726551
McCabe, Laura
c78f225f-1fb6-4644-9750-d929b510b058
Thompson, Hilary
72d70267-f6c9-4e67-97ed-73b161ae2430
Awogbade, Moji
dfbbb5b8-b30b-4de9-853d-8daa8a0c57b6
Johns, Jemma
e0a360ec-b270-478d-a3d3-4029d5664545
Brunetta, Denise M.
9312cf9e-834f-424f-afb3-0a89c77b651d
Seed, Paul T.
d3eda3f4-0e4c-4c17-9efd-dc75b583e79a

Oteng-Ntim, Eugene, Oakley, Laura L., Robinson, Vicky, Brien, Sarah, Joseph, Jeannine, Sharif, Joseph, McCabe, Laura, Thompson, Hilary, Awogbade, Moji, Johns, Jemma, Brunetta, Denise M. and Seed, Paul T. (2024) Prophylactic exchange transfusion in sickle cell disease pregnancy: a TAPS2 feasibility randomized controlled trial. Blood Advances, 8 (16), 4359-4369. (doi:10.1182/bloodadvances.2024012923).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Serial prophylactic exchange blood transfusion (SPEBT) is increasingly used in sickle cell disease (SCD) pregnancy, despite a lack of robust evidence. The Transfusion Antenatally in Pregnant Women with Sickle Cell Disease (TAPS2) study assessed the feasibility and acceptability of conducting a definitive randomized controlled trial of SPEBT (intervention) vs standard care (control) in this population. Women aged ≥18 years with SCD, between 6+0 and 18+6 weeks of singleton gestation, were randomized 1:1 every 6 -10 weeks throughout pregnancy in 7 hospitals in England. The main outcomes were recruitment rate (primary outcome), acceptability, and retention. Secondary outcomes were safety and maternal/infant outcomes. In total, 194 women were screened over 42 months (extended because of the pandemic), 88 were eligible, and 35 (39.8%) consented to participate; 18 participants were randomized to intervention, and 17 to control. Follow-up data were collected on all participants. Twelve patients in the intervention group received at least 1 SPEBT, of these, 11 received ≥3. The remaining patient was withdrawn from SPEBT because of transfusion reaction. Sixteen control participants required at least 1 transfusion. There were no statistically significant differences in maternal, infant, and postnatal outcomes. A trend toward a lower incidence of vaso-occlusive crisis, preterm delivery, and improved birthweight was observed in the intervention. The study achieved satisfactory recruitment and retention, confirming its acceptability to participants. TAPS2 demonstrates that it is feasible to perform a definitive international trial of SPEBT in SCD pregnancy. These trials were registered at www.ClinicalTrials.gov as #NCT03975894 and International Standard Randomized Controlled Trial Number (www.isrctn.com; #ISRCTN52684446).

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Accepted/In Press date: 24 June 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 August 2024
Published date: 27 August 2024
Keywords: Sickle cell disease, pregnancy, feasibility RCT, Transfusion

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493219
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493219
ISSN: 2473-9529
PURE UUID: 4cd7a574-0327-4006-8b20-9aed9048a916
ORCID for Sarah Brien: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1120-2364

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Date deposited: 28 Aug 2024 16:31
Last modified: 29 Aug 2024 01:37

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Contributors

Author: Eugene Oteng-Ntim
Author: Laura L. Oakley
Author: Vicky Robinson
Author: Sarah Brien ORCID iD
Author: Jeannine Joseph
Author: Joseph Sharif
Author: Laura McCabe
Author: Hilary Thompson
Author: Moji Awogbade
Author: Jemma Johns
Author: Denise M. Brunetta
Author: Paul T. Seed

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