Efficacy and Safety Study of CA330 Hemoadsorption Device on IL-6 Removal in Septic Patients
SepsisSepsis persists to be the leading causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Moreover, the magnitude of health care resources utilized when managing septic patients is huge. All these hard facts call for constant efforts to optimize therapy. At present, the definitive therapy is adequate antibiotics and infectious source control. Fortunately, research has led to a better understanding of the pathophysiology of sepsis, in which the activation of multiple pro- and anti-inflammatory mediators plays a key role. This has led to the development of treatment strategies aimed at restoring a balanced immune response by eliminating/deactivating these inflammatory mediators. Whilst animal models of sepsis have provided encouraging results with strategies aiming at immune response modulation, clinical studies in patients using targeted pharmacological approaches have so far proved disappointing. Besides of acute kidney injury (AKI), renal replacement therapy (RRT) is applied to remove inflammatory mediators extracorporeally. Across the different modalities, the application of adsorption may help deactivate and decrease the peak elevation of these mediators in earlier course of sepsis, when levels of endotoxins and cytokines are extremely high. Recently, attempts to improve the outcome of sepsis patients with such devices, ie CytoSorb cytokine hemoadsorption and polymyxin B (Toraymyxin) endotoxin adsorption, have seen a certain renaissance. However, the clinical evidence to date supporting hemoadsorption for removal of endotoxins and/or proinflammatory mediators in sepsis remains incompetent and controversial. CA330 (Jafron Biomedical Co , Ltd, Zhuhai, China) is a hemoadsorption device containing hemocompatible, porous polymeric beads capable of removing cytokines and other mid-molecular weight toxins from blood by size exclusion and surface adsorption. Compared with HA330, improved resin synthesis technology makes CA330 a better performance in removing cytokines. This trial is the first to evaluate CA330 efficacy of cytokine reduction using the change in plasma interleukin (IL)-6 concentrations over time as a primary outcome. Although the trial was neither designed nor powered to evaluate outcome, we also evaluated organ function parameters as well as 28-day all-cause mortality.
Goal-directed De-escalation in ARDS
ARDSHuman2 moreObjective: To compare two de-escalation strategies guided by either extravascular lung water or global end-diastolic volume-oriented algorithms in patients with sepsis and ARDS. Design: A prospective randomized study. Setting: City Hospital #1 of Arkhangelsk, Russia, mixed ICU. Patients: Sixty patients with sepsis and ARDS were randomized to receive de-escalation fluid therapy, guided either by extravascular lung water index (EVLWI, n = 30) or global end-diastolic volume index (GEDVI, n = 30). Intervention: In case of GEDVI > 650 mL/m2 or EVLWI > 10 mL/kg, diuretics and/or controlled ultrafiltration were administered. The primary goal of de-escalation was to achieve the cumulative 48-hr fluid balance in the range of 0 to - 3000 mL. If GEDVI < 650 mL/m2 or EVLWI < 10 mL/kg, the target fluid balance was set from 0 to +3000 mL.
De-resuscitation Informed by Ultrasound for Patients With Sepsis
SepsisSeptic Shock3 moreRandomized, unblinded clinical trial of 152 critically ill patients with sepsis admitted to the intensive care unit. The primary determine if using the Venous Excess Ultrasound Score (VExUS) to guide fluid deresuscitation in critically ill patients with sepsis reduces net fluid balance at 5 days as compared to usual care.
The Effects of SGC on Glucose Control in Critically Ill Patients With Sepsis
SepsisHyperglycemia1 morePoorly glycemic control in critically ill patients can increase their mortality, while safe and efficient glucose control is laborious and time-consuming. The Space Glucose Control which is installed with eMPC(enhanced Model Predictive Control) can get the blood glucose target range safely and effectively through regulating insulin dose rate, and decrease the glucose variability. This study is a random controlled trial involving the patients with sepsis in intensive care unit in order to evaluate the difference of safety and efficacy of blood glucose control between SGC directed and conventional treatment. At last, the trial results can determine whether the Space Glucose Control can control blood glucose safely and effectively in the patients with sepsis in intensive care units.
Effect of Enteral Genistein Supplementation in Sepsis
SepsisTo evaluate effects of genistein supplementation to enteral nutrition on inflammatory cytokines and morbidity in patients with sepsis
Efficacy of Bevacizumab in Preventing Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)
Severe SepsisAcute Respiratory Distress SyndromeThis study aims to test the effectiveness of a single intravenous (IV, through the vein) dose of the study drug, bevacizumab (Avastin), in preventing/reducing the development of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS), in patients with severe sepsis, who are at high risk for developing ARDS. ARDS is a lung disease caused by a lung injury that leads to lung function impairment. The condition the patient has,severe sepsis, is a medical condition associated with an infection characterized as an immune system inflammatory response throughout your whole body that can lead to organ dysfunction, low blood pressure or insufficient blood flow to one or more of your organs.
Effect Study of Tigecycline to Treat Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock
Abdominal InfectionSelection of tigecycline in severe sepsis and septic shock patients in empirical antibiotic therapy (Hai Zheng Energy Star ®) combined with piperacillin / tazobactam (tazocin ®) scheme, compared with the classical scheme, evaluate its efficacy, safety index.
The Impact of Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy on the Outcomes of Burn Patients With Early Phase...
BurnsSepsisThe purpose of this study is to determine if early application of CRRT will result in an improvement of clinical outcomes of burn patients during the early phase of sepsis
Pro-inflammatory Cytokines Profile and Mortality Rate of Critically Ill Septic Patients Following...
Severe SepsisSepsis is one of the most prevalent and fatal diseases in intensive care units .unfortunately, therapeutic approach to sepsis has remained unchanged for many years. Nowadays, the role of cytokines in pathogenesis of sepsis is obvious. Continuous elevated levels of various cytokines in severe sepsis could result in uncontrolled inflammation status. Breaking of inflammatory cascade may lead to improvement in survival. It seems that modulation of inflammation is one of the strategic plans to conquest sepsis. Therefore, elimination of bacterial toxins and pro-inflammatory cytokines from the systemic circulation by plasmapheresis supposed to be rational approach. Researchers have done several attempts to clarify the efficacy of plasmapheresis in sepsis treatment. However because of inconsistent results, routine use of this procedure in patients with severe sepsis remains controversial. The aim of the present survey is to determine the effect of plasmapheresis on plasma levels of main pro-inflammatory cytokines and evaluate its therapeutic efficacy in improvement of outcome and treatment of severe sepsis.
Study of Procalcitonin (PCT)-Guided Antibiotic Use in Severe Sepsis Patients Without Obvious Infection...
Severe SepsisA recent study has demonstrated that in low respiratory infections, a strategy using prescription of antibiotics based on the pro-calcitonin level allows decreasing recourse to antibiotics by 47% without prognostic modification. The aim is to evaluate the impact on antibiotics consumption of an algorithm using procalcitonin level in patients exhibiting severe sepsis symptomatology but without clearly identified hosted germs or infectious centre. This multicenter study is a randomized prospective open study involving 9 ICU departments in France, comparing two strategies on antibiotherapy treatment period one based on procalcitonin level(experimental group) the other on physician's appreciation(control group) 140 adult patients should be included with a severe sepsis symptomatology, whose infectious etiology has not been proven. The main non-inclusion criterium is: the presence of a pathogen agent or infectious centre clearly identified. The primary outcome is the rate of patients undergoing antibiotic treatment at D5. Secondary outcomes: duration of the antibiotic treatment, mortality rate and duration in stay in intensive care ward and evolution of the SOFA score between D0, D3 and D5. Duration of patient enrollment is 30 days.