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Clinical Trial Summary

Septic shock and the underlying dysregulated inflammatory host-response remain a major contributor to mortality in critically ill patients. Cytokine adsorption represents an attractive approach to the treatment of septic shock. Nevertheless, its effect on circulating cytokine levels, as well as on the course of disease remains largely unassessed.


Clinical Trial Description

Cytokine-release plays an important role in the physiology of immune response to pathologic influences by recruiting immune cells to the pathogenic loci, be they of infectious or of non-infectious nature. Once at the focus, the activated immune cells can in turn release more cytokines if a more extensive immune response is needed. This extremely important mechanism for the organism, can however become pathological if the positive feedback loop between immune cells and cytokines, for any reason, overshoots in form of a so called cytokine storm and substantial amounts of released cytokines gain a systemic influence. The acute complication of this immune over-reaction is a SIRS, which can critically escalate into a potentially lethal multiple organ dysfunction syndrome, thus requiring immediate intensive care treatment. It is, having this framework in mind, the reason why the CytoSorb-Adsorber has been developed as a new therapeutic milestone. Essentially a haemoperfusion-filter, which through its layering with polymer beads (Divinylbenzene/ Polyvinylpyrrolidone) can adsorb cytokines as well as multiple inflammatory mediators and thus effectively remove them from the bloodstream, reducing their possible systemic influence and hence improving the outcome for patients being treated with it. The CytoSorb-Adsorber is an already CE-approved product, which has demonstrated its capacity to significantly reduce cytokine-levels such as IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, TNFα, HMGB-1, IL-1ra in a variety of pre-clinical studies. As well as in a clinical randomised multicentre study, which tested the CytoSorb-Adsorber on a cohort of ALI/ ARDS and severely septic/ septically shocked patients. The results of the later study can be very positively assessed, first of all and most importantly showing, that no security concerns had to be had in regard to the haemoperfusion-filter, as no adverse-effects attributable to the device were found. And further, by proving an effect on systemic cytokine-levels in form of a significant reduction in IL-6, IL-8, MCP-1 and IL-1ra, as well as a reduction in mortality of those patients with high initial cytokine levels, effectively reducing the 60 day mortality rate from 60% to 17% in a pool of 14 patients. With the intention to further elucidate the usefulness and clinical importance of this device this study proposes a prospective recruitment of patients in severe refractory septic shock to test the efficiency of this device. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04910893
Study type Interventional
Source University of Zurich
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date November 27, 2014
Completion date December 31, 2018

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