Prospective randomized study of a protein-based tissue adhesive used as a hemostatic and structural adjunct in cardiac and vascular anastomotic repair procedures.

Publication/Presentation Date

8-1-2003

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to determine whether adjunctive use of the bovine serum albumin and glutaraldehyde tissue adhesive BioGlue (BioGlue Surgical Adhesive; CryoLife, Inc) could reduce the rate of anastomotic bleeding in patients undergoing cardiac and vascular repair procedures when compared with a standard repair control. This was a prospective multicenter, randomized, controlled clinical trial conducted in accordance with the IRB at each participating institution.

STUDY DESIGN: A total of 151 patients consented to participation and were randomly assigned to standard repair plus BioGlue (n = 76) or standard repair alone (n = 75). These two groups were statistically homogeneous for age, gender, race, procedure, and number of anastomoses. Patients underwent cardiac procedures (n = 49), aortic procedures (n = 105), or peripheral vascular procedures (n = 48).

RESULTS: Anastomotic bleeding was significantly reduced in the BioGlue group (18.8% of anastomoses) compared with the control group (42.9% of anastomoses, p < 0.001). Pledget use was reduced in the BioGlue group (26.2%) compared with the control group (35.9%, p = 0.047). Days in the ICU and total days in the hospital were slightly higher in the control group. Adverse event profiles were equivalent between the two groups except for occurrence of neurological defects, which were threefold less in the BioGlue group (p = 0.009).

CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that using BioGlue as an adjunct to standard repair methods is safe and significantly reduces the occurrence of intraoperative anastomotic site bleeding in cardiac and vascular repair patients. Using BioGlue along suture lines reinforces anastomoses, thus minimizing pledget use.

Volume

197

Issue

2

First Page

243

Last Page

252

ISSN

1072-7515

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

12892806

Department(s)

Department of Surgery

Document Type

Article

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