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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00241228
Other study ID # 9410-04
Secondary ID 2004-024
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received October 17, 2005
Last updated October 12, 2010
Start date October 2005
Est. completion date October 2010

Study information

Verified date October 2010
Source University Hospital, Bordeaux
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority France: Afssaps - Agence française de sécurité sanitaire des produits de santé (Saint-Denis)
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Sepsis and septic shock are still important causes of mortality in intensive care medicine. Renal replacement therapy by standard volume haemofiltration is currently used, but a higher-volume haemofiltration may improve the prognosis. The study is a prospective randomized multicenter trial comparing two treatments in patients suffering from septic shock complicated with acute renal failure admitted to ICU. One group will be treated by early high volume haemofiltration (70 ml/kg/h) and the second group by standard volume haemofiltration (35 ml/kg/h). The main outcome will be one-month mortality.


Description:

Background

Sepsis and septic shock are still important causes of mortality in intensive care medicine nowadays. Mortality ranges from 40 up to 80 % depending on the number of organ failures. Therapeutic strategy consists of two major components: haemodynamic stabilization with restoration of adequate arterial pressure and optimization of peripheral perfusion delivery, and infection treatment. Mortality remains high despite the use of new antimicrobial therapy and adjuvant therapies such as activated protein C, low dose corticoids and haemofiltration. Initial observations in patients with acute renal failure treated by haemofiltration showed azotemia control, restoration of the sodium-water balance, elimination of inflammatory mediators and improvement of the cardiac and pulmonary functions was demonstrated independently of a negative water balance. There is no human randomized study so far demonstrating these preliminary findings. Nevertheless, several authors have demonstrated inflammatory mediators elimination by the use of haemofiltration. Moreover, the clinical improvement seems to be related to the ultra filtration dose and to the early initiation of therapy. Joannes-Boyau et al carried out a pilot study in abdominal surgery patients demonstrating that the use of high volume haemofiltration in patients with septic shock and multiple organ failure restores hemodynamic stability with drastic reductions in catecholamine requirements and a substantial reduction of observed vs. expected mortality.

Objectives

The principal objective of the study is to evaluate the effect of early Continuous High Volume Haemofiltration on 28-day mortality in patients with septic shock complicated by acute renal failure. The secondary objectives are to assess the effect of High Volume Haemofiltration on haemodynamics, doses of catecholamines, organ failures, duration of mechanical ventilation, duration of renal replacement therapy need, morbidity, length of ICU and hospital stay, and 60- and 90-day mortality.

Study design

Open label randomized multicenter controlled trial on two parallel groups of patients with septic shock and acute renal failure admitted to ICU, treated early either by high volume (70 ml/kg/h) or by standard volume (35 ml/kg/h) haemofiltration.

Eligibility criteria

Inclusion criteria. Septic shock (Bone criteria) for less than 24 hours, RIFLE criteria : injury or worse, age over 18 years, and written informed consent by next of kin. Non inclusion criteria. Cirrhosis, age over 80 years, life expectancy less than 3 months or metastatic cancer.

Intervention

High volume (70 ml/kg/h) vs. standard volume (35 ml/kg/h) haemofiltration during 96 hours. Further renal replacement therapy (if haemofiltration, only standard volume is allowed) may be used according to investigator decision.

Primary endpoint

All cause 28-day mortality.

Statistical aspects

460 patients are planned to be included (230 in each group). A 15 % absolute reduction in 28-days all-cause mortality in the high volume group compared with the standard group is expected. However, as this reduction might be greater, an interim analysis is planned when half of the total sample size will have been included. Data will be analyzed on an intention-to-treat basis.

Duration of the study: 3 years.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 139
Est. completion date October 2010
Est. primary completion date October 2010
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 18 Years to 80 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- septic shock (Bone criteria) for less than 24 hours

- RIFLE criteria : injury or worse

- age over 18 years

- written informed consent by next of kin.

Exclusion Criteria:

- cirrhosis

- age over 80 years

- life expectancy less than 3 months or metastatic cancer

- for women : pregnancy and breastfeeding

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Intervention

Device:
Venovenous haemofiltration (renal replacement therapy)
High Volume ultra filtration (70 ml/kg/h)
Venovenous haemofiltration (renal replacement therapy)
Conventional Volume (35 ml/kg/h)

Locations

Country Name City State
Belgium Cliniques de l'Europe Bruxelles
Belgium Astrid Queen Military Hospital Bruxelles (Neder Over Hembeek)
Belgium TIVOLI Hospital La Louviere
Belgium University Hospital Liege
Belgium St-Pierre Para-University Hospital Ottignies-Louvain-La-Neuve
France Hospital Agen
France Clinic Bordeaux Nord Bordeaux
France University Hospital Brest
France University Hospital Grenoble
France Hospital R Boulin - Libourne Libourne
France University Hospital Lyon
France Aphp - Hegp Paris
France Service d'Anesthésie-Réanimation II, Groupe Hospitalier Sud, CHU de Bordeaux Pessac
France Hospital Tourcoing
Netherlands Hospital Delf
Netherlands Hospital Heerlen

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University Hospital, Bordeaux Ministry of Health, France

Countries where clinical trial is conducted

Belgium,  France,  Netherlands, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary all-cause mortality. 28-day Yes
Secondary Haemodynamic parameters and volume loading Every 12 hours during 96 hours after inclusion Yes
Secondary Doses and duration of catecholamine infusions Every 12 hours during 96 hours after inclusion Yes
Secondary Organ failures During 96 hours after inclusion No
Secondary Duration of mechanical ventilation Total during the stay in intensive care No
Secondary Duration of renal replacement therapy Total during the stay in Intensive Care Unity (ICU) No
Secondary Morbidity Total during the stay in intensive care No
Secondary Length of stay in ICU and hospital End of hospitalization No
Secondary Mortality in ICU (96 first hours after inclusion), 60 and 90-day No
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