Sepsis Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Utility of Ischemia Modified Albumin (IMA) in Sepsis
The purpose of this study is to determine if levels of ischemia modified albumin (IMA) in
blood are elevated in patients with suspected infection and are predictive of severity of
illness in patients with sepsis.
In order to compare subjects with infection to those without infection who are
representative of the ED population at each site, a group of non-infected control patients
will be enrolled. Each hospital will enroll subjects with age (by decade) and sex matched
controls to reflect the population of subjects suspected of infection.
Sepsis is an unconquered challenge in medicine, affecting people of all ages and
demographics. Severe sepsis affects approximately 751,000 patients in the United States per
annum, with healthcare costs approaching $16.7 billion dollars a year. Mortality from severe
sepsis and septic shock approaches 30 - 70 % with 215,000 deaths annually. Thus, sepsis is a
disease with healthcare dollars and mortality rates approaching those of heart disease and
cancer.
Identifying patients with sepsis, and in particular hypoperfusion, is a challenge to the
clinician. A variety of clinical and laboratory findings are helpful, but there is no single
test to identify sepsis or assess its severity.
Ischemia and reactive oxygen species play a significant role in the pathogenesis of sepsis.
Moreover, there is evidence to suggest that septic shock results in dysfunction of
autoregulatory mechanisms and misdistribution of blood flow, precipitating both regional and
global ischemia. A method that can help rapidly assess hypoperfusion would be clinically
useful. Ischemia modified albumin (IMA) is a potential marker for ischemia in acute coronary
syndrome patients; thus, it is hypothesized that IMA may be also useful as a prognostic
biomarker for clinical identification of infection and the severity of illness in patients
with sepsis.
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Observational Model: Defined Population, Primary Purpose: Screening, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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