COST-BENEFIT AND EFFICACY OF APROTININ COMPARED WITH EPSILON-AMINOCAPROIC ACID IN PATIENTS HAVING REPEATED CARDIAC OPERATIONS - A RANDOMIZED, BLINDED CLINICAL-TRIAL
E. Bennettguerrero et al., COST-BENEFIT AND EFFICACY OF APROTININ COMPARED WITH EPSILON-AMINOCAPROIC ACID IN PATIENTS HAVING REPEATED CARDIAC OPERATIONS - A RANDOMIZED, BLINDED CLINICAL-TRIAL, Anesthesiology, 87(6), 1997, pp. 1373-1380
Background: Aprotinin and epsilon-aminocaproic acid are routinely used
to reduce bleeding during cardiac surgery, The marked difference in a
verage wholesale cost between these two drug therapies (aprotinin, $1,
080 vs. epsilon-aminocaproic acid, $11) has generated significant cont
roversy regarding their relative efficacies and costs, Methods: in a m
ulticenter, randomized, prospective, blinded trial patients having rep
eated cardiac surgery received either a high-dose regimen of aprotinin
(total dose, 6 x 10(6) kallikrein inactivator units) or epsilon-amino
caproic acid (total dose, 270 mg/kg). Results: Two hundred four patien
ts were studied Overall (data are median [25th-75th percentiles]), apr
otinin-treated patients had less postoperative thoracic drainage (511
ml[383-805 mi] vs. 655 mi [464-1,045 ml]: P -0.016) and received fewer
platelet transfusions (0 [range, 0-1] vs. [range, 0-2]; P = 0.036). T
he surgical field was more likely to be considered free of bleeding in
aprotinin-treated patients (44% vs. 26%; P = 0.012), No differences,
however, were seen in allogeneic erythrocyte transfusions or in the ti
me required for chest closure, Overall, direct and indirect bleeding-r
elated costs were greater in aprotinin-than in epsilon-aminocaproic ac
id-treated patients ($1,813 [$1,476-2,605] vs. $1,088 [range, $511-2,0
57]; P = 0.0001). This difference in cost per case varied in magnitude
among sites but not in direction. Conclusions: Aprotinin was more eff
ective than epsilon-aminocaproic acid at decreasing bleeding and plate
let transfusions. epsilon-aminocaproic acid however, was the more cost
-effective therapy over a broad range of estimates for bleeding-relate
d costs in patients undergoing repeated cardiac surgery, A cost-benefi
t analysis using the lower cost of half-dose aprotinin ($540) still re
sulted in a significant cost advantage using epsilon-aminocaproic ther
apy (P = 0.022).