Popular bypass surgery drug does ‘more harm than good’
Protamine, a drug used for more than 40 years immediately after coronary
artery bypass surgery to return thinned blood to its normal state, has been
shown to have more potential negative side effects than previously
appreciated, according to Duke University Medical Center researchers.
The
study found that small blood pressure changes that often occur with
protamine's use are associated with increased mortality. Protamine, a drug
purified from salmon sperm, is given to patients intravenously after bypass
surgery to counteract the effects of the anticoagulant heparin, given during
surgery. Heparin prevents clots from forming in the heart-lung machine,
which oxygenates and pumps blood for the body while the heart is stopped.
Since protamine's approval in the early 1960s, no drug has been approved by
the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to reverse the properties of heparin.
“Without protamine to effectively reverse the properties of heparin, bypass
surgery would not have reached the successful point where it is today,” said
Duke anesthesiologist Ian Welsby, M.D., who presented the results of the
Duke study on March 25, 2003 at the 77th Clinical and Scientific Congress of
the International Anesthesia Research Society.
“We
have long known that an extremely small proportion of bypass patients have
severe allergic reactions to protamine, including sharp blood pressure
changes and cardio-vascular collapse,” Welsby continued. “We, however,
wanted to see if smaller changes in blood pressure in response to protamine
were related to any adverse effect on the outcomes of these patients.”
Duke anesthesiologists have developed a system that continually records
blood pressures of patients during and after surgery. For this study, they
retrospectively analyzed the data on 6,921 patients who underwent bypass
surgery at Duke. They studied the minute-by-minute fluctuations in blood
pressure for the 30 minutes after the administration of protamine and
compared them to the blood pressure immediately before the protamine dose.
They then correlated the degree of blood pressure change with the incidence
of patient deaths while still in the hospital.
“We
found a significant association between drops in pressure and mortality,”
stated Welsby.
Specifically, 19% of the patients had average blood pressure drops of 20% or
more during the 30-minute period, and this was significantly associated with
in-hospital death, he said. Furthermore, each incremental decrease in blood
pressure, as defined in the study, translated into an additional 30% greater
chance of in-hospital death.
“While 1 to 5 percent of patients will exhibit an allergic reaction to
protamine, we showed that smaller reactions are much more common, and that
protamine, independent of other factors, is associated with a higher risk of
mortality,” Welsby said.
In
addition to its effects on blood pressure, protamine can also depress heart
function, activate certain immune responses, and lead to pulmonary
hypertension. It has a high positive electrical charge, while heparin has a
high negative charge, so they ‘cancel’ each other out, permitting the body
to clear the combined agents quickly.
“People are beginning to recognize that while protamine certainly has its
benefits, it does have potential downsides as well,” Dr. Mark
Stafford-Smith, senior member of the research team, pointed out. Both Welsby
and Stafford-Smith agreed more research is needed. In light of these
findings it might be time to intensify the search for a potential
alternative to protamine, or better understand the mechanisms of its action,
they said.
While that conclusion may have been based solely on the findings of their
study, one factor could cause the conclusions to be questioned: the research
was funded by Biomarin Pharmaceuticals, Novato, Calif., which is developing
a drug they hope will replace protamine.
SOURCE:
“Common Heart Surgery Drug Potentially Dangerous,”
Duke
University
Medical
Center,
March 25, 2003.