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Palliative long-term abdominal drains vs. large volume paracentesis for refractory ascites secondary to cirrhosis: protocol for a definitive randomised controlled trial (REDUCe2 study)

Palliative long-term abdominal drains vs. large volume paracentesis for refractory ascites secondary to cirrhosis: protocol for a definitive randomised controlled trial (REDUCe2 study)
Palliative long-term abdominal drains vs. large volume paracentesis for refractory ascites secondary to cirrhosis: protocol for a definitive randomised controlled trial (REDUCe2 study)
Background: ascites remains the most common complication of cirrhosis and a frequent reason for hospitalisation in advanced chronic liver disease (ACLD). Ascites is associated with significant symptom burden, caregiver workload and poor health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Once refractory to treatment, median survival is poor. Many with refractory ascites (RA) will neither receive a transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) nor a liver transplant. Palliative care remains underutilised and evidence-based interventions focused on improving HRQoL are clearly needed. The standard of care for RA is repeated hospital ascites drainage with large volume paracentesis (LVP). Our earlier feasibility randomised controlled trial (RCT) (REDUCe) showed acceptability of palliative tunnelled long-term abdominal drains (LTADs), as well as preliminary evidence of safety and efficacy. The current REDUCe2 trial is a definitive national study designed to assess the impact of palliative LTADs on HRQoL in patients with RA due to ACLD.

Methods/design: the REDUCe2 study is a pragmatic, multicentre, open-label, mixed-methods, superiority RCT being conducted in England, Scotland and Wales. Patients with RA secondary to ACLD who are ineligible for a liver transplant or TIPS will be randomised 1:1 to receive a LTAD or continue the current standard of care (LVP). Fortnightly home research visits will be conducted for 12 weeks in both arms. The primary outcome will be liver specific HRQoL assessed at 12 weeks using the Short Form Liver Disease Quality of Life questionnaire (SFLDQoL). Secondary outcomes include assessment of symptom burden (Ascites Questionnaire), health utilities (EQ-5D-5L tool), caregiver workload (Caregiver Roles and Responsibilities Scale—CRRS questionnaire), safety (including infection, acute kidney injury and other clinical outcomes), health resource utilisation and acceptability of the intervention by patients, caregivers and healthcare professionals. We aim to recruit a total of 310 patients (155 in each arm).

Discussion: effective palliative care provision remains an unmet need in ACLD. The REDUCe2 study, the largest palliative interventional trial in the UK, aims to address this inequity for this vulnerable and underserved cohort. It has the potential to generate high quality evidence to optimise and enhance palliative care in RA.

Trial registration: ISRCTN26993825, date registered: 15/08/2022.
Caregivers, Patient reported outcome measures, Cost-effectiveness analysis, End-stage liver disease, Palliative care, Ascites, Paracentesis, Quality of life
1745-6215
Haddadin, Yazan
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Anagnostopoulou, Vasso
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Bremner, Stephen
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Harder, Helen
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Stakings, Rachel
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Lambert, Debbie
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Porges, Alison
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Perry, Nicky
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Wood, Wendy
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Arbon, Amy
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Gage, Heather
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Glover, Matthew
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Macken, Lucia
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Johnson, Malcolm
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Ganai, Bhaskar
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Joshi, Dhiraj
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Hudson, Ben
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Butler, Claire
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Richardson, Alison
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Wright, Mark
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Prentice, Wendy
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O'Brien, Alistair
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Bedlington, Joan
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Steer, Shani
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Gaskin, Tom
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Verma, Sumita
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et al.
Haddadin, Yazan
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Anagnostopoulou, Vasso
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Bremner, Stephen
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Harder, Helen
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Stakings, Rachel
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Lambert, Debbie
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Porges, Alison
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Perry, Nicky
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Wood, Wendy
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Arbon, Amy
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Gage, Heather
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Glover, Matthew
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Macken, Lucia
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Johnson, Malcolm
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Ganai, Bhaskar
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Joshi, Dhiraj
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Hudson, Ben
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Butler, Claire
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Richardson, Alison
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Wright, Mark
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Prentice, Wendy
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O'Brien, Alistair
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Bedlington, Joan
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Steer, Shani
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Gaskin, Tom
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Verma, Sumita
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Haddadin, Yazan, Anagnostopoulou, Vasso and Bremner, Stephen , et al. (2025) Palliative long-term abdominal drains vs. large volume paracentesis for refractory ascites secondary to cirrhosis: protocol for a definitive randomised controlled trial (REDUCe2 study). Trials, 26 (1), [193]. (doi:10.1186/s13063-025-08873-z).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: ascites remains the most common complication of cirrhosis and a frequent reason for hospitalisation in advanced chronic liver disease (ACLD). Ascites is associated with significant symptom burden, caregiver workload and poor health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Once refractory to treatment, median survival is poor. Many with refractory ascites (RA) will neither receive a transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) nor a liver transplant. Palliative care remains underutilised and evidence-based interventions focused on improving HRQoL are clearly needed. The standard of care for RA is repeated hospital ascites drainage with large volume paracentesis (LVP). Our earlier feasibility randomised controlled trial (RCT) (REDUCe) showed acceptability of palliative tunnelled long-term abdominal drains (LTADs), as well as preliminary evidence of safety and efficacy. The current REDUCe2 trial is a definitive national study designed to assess the impact of palliative LTADs on HRQoL in patients with RA due to ACLD.

Methods/design: the REDUCe2 study is a pragmatic, multicentre, open-label, mixed-methods, superiority RCT being conducted in England, Scotland and Wales. Patients with RA secondary to ACLD who are ineligible for a liver transplant or TIPS will be randomised 1:1 to receive a LTAD or continue the current standard of care (LVP). Fortnightly home research visits will be conducted for 12 weeks in both arms. The primary outcome will be liver specific HRQoL assessed at 12 weeks using the Short Form Liver Disease Quality of Life questionnaire (SFLDQoL). Secondary outcomes include assessment of symptom burden (Ascites Questionnaire), health utilities (EQ-5D-5L tool), caregiver workload (Caregiver Roles and Responsibilities Scale—CRRS questionnaire), safety (including infection, acute kidney injury and other clinical outcomes), health resource utilisation and acceptability of the intervention by patients, caregivers and healthcare professionals. We aim to recruit a total of 310 patients (155 in each arm).

Discussion: effective palliative care provision remains an unmet need in ACLD. The REDUCe2 study, the largest palliative interventional trial in the UK, aims to address this inequity for this vulnerable and underserved cohort. It has the potential to generate high quality evidence to optimise and enhance palliative care in RA.

Trial registration: ISRCTN26993825, date registered: 15/08/2022.

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s13063-025-08873-z (1) - Version of Record
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Submitted date: 9 May 2025
Accepted/In Press date: 9 May 2025
Published date: 4 June 2025
Keywords: Caregivers, Patient reported outcome measures, Cost-effectiveness analysis, End-stage liver disease, Palliative care, Ascites, Paracentesis, Quality of life

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502228
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502228
ISSN: 1745-6215
PURE UUID: 46deee67-e300-4f69-bc58-7976e1a772f3
ORCID for Alison Richardson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3127-5755

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Date deposited: 18 Jun 2025 16:45
Last modified: 04 Sep 2025 02:11

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Contributors

Author: Yazan Haddadin
Author: Vasso Anagnostopoulou
Author: Stephen Bremner
Author: Helen Harder
Author: Rachel Stakings
Author: Debbie Lambert
Author: Alison Porges
Author: Nicky Perry
Author: Wendy Wood
Author: Amy Arbon
Author: Heather Gage
Author: Matthew Glover
Author: Lucia Macken
Author: Malcolm Johnson
Author: Bhaskar Ganai
Author: Dhiraj Joshi
Author: Ben Hudson
Author: Claire Butler
Author: Mark Wright
Author: Wendy Prentice
Author: Alistair O'Brien
Author: Joan Bedlington
Author: Shani Steer
Author: Tom Gaskin
Author: Sumita Verma
Corporate Author: et al.

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