Beta-blockers or Placebo for Primary Prophylaxis (BOPPP) of oesophageal varices: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial

Vishal Patel(King's College London), Mark McPhail(King's College London), Ruhama Uddin(King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust), Hassan Jafari(King's College London), Vanessa Lawrence(King's College London), Clair Le Boutillier(King's College London), James Shearer(King's College London), Nahel Yaziji(King's College London), Angela Cape(King's College London), Haroon Ahmed(Cardiff University), Christopher D. Ward(NIHR Research Delivery Network), Peter Walsh, Kevin Besly(King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust), Ane Zamalloa(King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust), Joanna Kelly(King's College London), BOPPP study group, Ashis Mukhopadhya, Alicija Vileito, Tracy Henderson, Gwilym J. Webb, Jerrian Joyce Andrada, Abigail Ford, Cyril Sieberhagen, Claire Burston, Carol Brooks, Gavin Wright, Bushena Miyesa, Aimee Williams(Foundation for Liver Research), Jay Patel, Melchizedek Penacerrada, Gautham Appanna, Gifthy Perez, Joanne Elliott, Keval Naik, Susan Smolen(King's College London), Anna Beckwith, Matthew Foxton, Carina Bautista, Matthew Cramp, Ada Laureen Nweze, Gayatri Chakrabarty, Indhuja Rajkumar(King's College London), Merlin James, Steven Masson, Sheenu Thomas, Lucy Dixon, S. Hogg, Louise Finlay, Kuldeep Cheent, Jessica K. Camp, Adrian J. Stanley, Alexis Duncan, Lauren Walker, Duncan Napier, Paula Hilltout, Linda Hill, Hiromi Uzu, Moby Joseph, Suzannah Pegler, Camille Walling, Lynsey Corless, Anisoara Kingsbury, Tania Nurun, Debasish Das(King's College London), Anna Williams, Stephen Foley, C W Goodwin, Markus Gess, Margaret Grout(King's College London), Ka‐Kit Li, Olivia Watchorn, Laura S. Plummer, Laura Blackmore, Christos Tsintikidis, Allysha Perryman, G. W. G. Bird, Emily Phiri, Mohamed Saleh, A.O. Woghiren, D. S. A. Wickramasinghe, Jodie Wright, Michael H. Miller, Shona Murray, Leanne Cosgrove, John Hutchinson, Julie Burton, E Stoner, Stephanie Lupton, Mayur Kumar, Nicola Griffiths(King's College London), Anna Posada, Andrew Fowell, Avisnata Das, Jincy Daniel, Anu Rose Andrews, Dhiraj Tripathi, Emma Burke, E. R. EAVES, H Emms, Dina Mansour(King's College London), Ann Wilson, Maureen Armstrong, Rachael Swann, Faye McMeeken, Shona Perry, Naaventhan Palaniyappan, Elizabeth Davies, Kimberley Noon, Danielle Adebayo, Sarosh Khymani, Deepa Thapa, Mahesh Bhalme, Emma McKenna, Julie Chadwick(King's College London), Jo Tod, Nina Barratt, Annamaria Wilce, Andrew Austin, Catherine Addleton(King's College London), Ben Hudson(King's College London), Rob S. James, Lily Zitter, Jane Hall, Jennifer D. Ryan, Christine Eastgate, Edward Britton, Martina Lofthouse, Vikram Sharma(King's College London), James Hand, L Payaniandy, Paula Parás‐Bravo, Marinos Pericleous, Sheila Mtuwa, Wisdom Mbama, Khaleel Jamil, Sumita Verma(King's College London), Yaz Hassadin(NIHR Research Delivery Network), Zhengmei He, Zdenka Cipinova, Roger McCorry, Allison Lloyd, H Lawther, Zeino Zeino(NIHR Research Delivery Network), Lana Ward, Trudie Burge, Sarah Hughes, Joseph Delo, Criscel Jan Pelaez, David S. Whitley, Ameet Dhar, Nowlan Selvapatt, Maria Lanoria, Phil Berry, Sreelakshmi Kotha, Jessica Cordle, Ankita Sunny, Rohit Sinha, Louise Fairlie, Jennifer Henderson, D. Craig, Eman Alabsawy, Julie Tregonning, Luke Summers, S. L. Booth, Esther Unitt, Susan Dale, Francisco Porras Perez, Melanie Kent, Suzanne Naylor, Tom Pembroke, Danielle Rice, Mohammed Shariff, Xiaobei Zhao, Varinder Athwal, Alphonsa Biju, Sheetal Crasta(King's College London), Ben Carter(King's College London)
Trials
April 16, 2024
Cited by 6Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Liver disease is within the top five causes of premature death in adults. Deaths caused by complications of cirrhosis continue to rise, whilst deaths related to other non-liver disease areas are declining. Portal hypertension is the primary sequelae of cirrhosis and is associated with the development of variceal haemorrhage, ascites, hepatic encephalopathy and infection, collectively termed hepatic decompensation, which leads to hospitalisation and mortality. It remains uncertain whether administering a non-selective beta-blocker (NSBB), specifically carvedilol, at an earlier stage, i.e. when oesophageal varices are small, can prevent VH and reduce all-cause decompensation (ACD). METHODS/DESIGN: The BOPPP trial is a pragmatic, multicentre, placebo-controlled, triple-blinded, randomised controlled trial (RCT) in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Patients aged 18 years or older with cirrhosis and small oesophageal varices that have never bled will be recruited, subject to exclusion criteria. The trial aims to enrol 740 patients across 55 hospitals in the UK. Patients are allocated randomly on a 1:1 ratio to receive either carvedilol 6.25 mg (a NSBB) or a matched placebo, once or twice daily, for 36 months, to attain adequate power to determine the effectiveness of carvedilol in preventing or reducing ACD. The primary outcome is the time to first decompensating event. It is a composite primary outcome made up of variceal haemorrhage (VH, new or worsening ascites, new or worsening hepatic encephalopathy (HE), spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP), hepatorenal syndrome, an increase in Child-Pugh grade by 1 grade or MELD score by 5 points, and liver-related mortality. Secondary outcomes include progression to medium or large oesophageal varices, development of gastric, duodenal, or ectopic varices, participant quality of life, healthcare costs and transplant-free survival. DISCUSSION: The BOPPP trial aims to investigate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of carvedilol in patients with cirrhosis and small oesophageal varices to determine whether this non-selective beta-blocker can prevent or reduce hepatic decompensation. There is clinical equipoise on whether intervening in cirrhosis, at an earlier stage of portal hypertension, with NSBB therapy is beneficial. Should the trial yield a positive result, we anticipate that the administration and use of carvedilol will become widespread with pathways developed to standardise the administration of the medication in primary care. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The trial has been approved by the National Health Service (NHS) Research Ethics Committee (REC) (reference number: 19/YH/0015). The results of the trial will be submitted for publication in a peer-reviewed scientific journal. Participants will be informed of the results via the BOPPP website ( www.boppp-trial.org ) and partners in the British Liver Trust (BLT) organisation. TRIAL REGISTRATION: EUDRACT reference number: 2018-002509-78. ISRCTN reference number: ISRCTN10324656. Registered on April 24 2019.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis