Septic Shock Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pilot Study for the SQUEEZE Trial: a Trial to Determine Whether Septic Shock Reversal is Quicker in Pediatric Patients Randomized to an Early Goal Directed Fluid-sparing Strategy vs. Usual Care (SQUEEZE)
The purpose of the SQUEEZE Trial is to determine which fluid resuscitation strategy results in the best outcomes for children treated for suspected or confirmed septic shock. In this study, eligible children will be randomized to either the 'Usual Care Arm' or the 'Fluid Sparing Arm'. Children will receive treatment according to current ACCM Septic Shock Resuscitation Guidelines, with the assigned resuscitation strategy used to guide administration of further fluid boluses as well as the timing of initiation and escalation of vasoactive medications to achieve ACCM recommended hemodynamic targets.
Current pediatric surviving sepsis guidelines from the American College of Critical Care
Medicine (ACCM) emphasize an early and goal-directed approach to resuscitation. These
guidelines suggest that fluid resuscitation should be aggressive with repeated intravenous
(IV) fluid boluses of 20 mL/kg, such that some children may require as much as 200 mL/kg of
fluid to achieve therapeutic endpoints. The guidelines also recommend the initiation of
vasoactive agents at the stage of "fluid refractory shock", i.e. when there is persistent
hypoperfusion despite at least 60 ml/kg IV fluid. Improvements in pediatric septic shock
survival have been attributed to adherence to the first iteration of the ACCM septic shock
guidelines, and the use of goal directed targets. However, the largest and most publicized
pediatric trial of fluid resuscitation in children with suspected septic shock (FEAST
Trial), published in NEJM in 2011, demonstrated an increased mortality among children
treated with aggressive fluid resuscitation in comparison to the conservative fluid
resuscitation arm. As a result, the pediatric critical care community clearly acknowledges
that these results, while important, are not necessarily generalizable to developed
countries such as Canada.
Emerging publications in the ICU literature suggest that excessive compared to conservative
fluid administration in adults with septic shock worsens outcomes such as duration of
mechanical ventilation, complications related to the third-spacing of fluids, length of ICU
stay, and mortality. A systematic review published in August 2012 reveals a paucity of
randomized controlled trial (RCT) evidence apart from the FEAST trial examining the impact
of fluid resuscitation on mortality in children with septic shock. This raises the important
question of whether children in developed countries would also benefit from a fluid sparing
resuscitation strategy to achieve the ACCM goal-directed targets. Use of such a fluid
sparing strategy would, by default, require earlier initiation and preferential escalation
of vasoactive medications to meet ACCM hemodynamic goals. The optimal degree of fluid
resuscitation and the timing of initiation of vasoactive support in order to achieve
therapeutic targets in children with septic shock remains unanswered.
This Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial constitutes the first step in answering our research
question of whether, in pediatric patients with septic shock, use of a fluid sparing
strategy to achieve ACCM therapeutic goals, results in improved clinical outcomes without an
increased risk of adverse events, compared to the usual care of aggressive fluid
resuscitation as currently recommended by the ACCM guidelines. The purpose of the pilot
study is to determine feasibility and inform the appropriate methodological design of the
larger multi-centre RCT to fully answer our research question. The hypothesis of the pilot
study is that the SQUEEZE Trial is feasible to conduct.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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