Sepsis Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Procalcitonin and Survival Study - A Multicentre Single Blinded Randomized Controlled Trial to Investigate if Treatment Guided by Daily Procalcitonin Measurements Can Reduce Mortality in the Intensive Care Unit
This is a randomised, single blinded, multicentre trial to evaluate whether daily procalcitonin (PCT) measurements and immediate diagnostic and therapeutic responses to abnormal values and day-to-day changes can reduce the mortality of critically ill patients in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU).
Sepsis and complications to sepsis are major causes of mortality in critically ill patients.
Rapid treatment of sepsis is of crucial importance for survival of patients. In the ICU, the
infectious status of the patient is often difficult to assess because symptoms cannot be
expressed (unconscious or sedated patients) and signs may present atypically because of
immunologic incompetence and masking by the drugs given and thermo-therapy. Biological and
biochemical markers of inflammation (White Blood Cells (WBC), C-reactive protein) may often
be influenced by other parameters than infection, such as: trauma, surgery, other types of
inflammation such as rheumatoid diseases (C-reactive protein) and gluco-corticosteroid
treatment (WBC), and may be unacceptably slowly released after progression of an infection.
At the same time, lack of a relevant antimicrobial therapy in an early course of infection
may be fatal for the patient.
For these reasons, in the clinical setting, it is often necessary to initiate or adjust
antimicrobial therapy on an unsure ground and the relevant therapy may in some situations be
delayed for important hours or even days. Specific and rapid markers of bacterial infection
have been sought for use in the ICU. Mortality in critically ill patients increases gravely
when Procalcitonin levels increase from day to day (own submitted, though yet unpublished
data). Low PCT levels have been shown to effectively rule out sepsis.
However, no randomised controlled trials have been conducted to show if mortality in
critically ill patients can be reduced by using a strategy of daily standardised
Procalcitonin measurements as an early detector of serious bacterial infection. Therefore
evidence is presently not sufficient to introduce daily consecutive Procalcitonin
measurements to guide the diagnostic and therapeutic management of patients admitted to the
ICU .
The rationale for this trial is to assess the ability of daily Procalcitonin measurements to
reduce the mortality of critically ill patients.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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