Septic Shock Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of Extubation Delay After Prolonged Sedation With Inhaled Isoflurane Using the MIRUS® Device or Continuous Intravenous Midazolam in Patients With Septic Shock in Intensive Care
This monocentric, prospective, controlled, randomized, single-blind study will be conducted in surgical resuscitation at the Rouen University Hospital. The aim of our research project is to evaluate the extubation time after sedation with inhaled isoflurane compared to conventional intravenous sedation with midazolam, in patients who require prolonged sedation (3 to 28 days) in a context of septic shock. This population is particularly at risk of hypnotic accumulation due to the prolonged duration of use and the increased risk of developing renal or hepatic impairment in connection with septic shock. Based on data from the literature on shorter durations of up to 96 hours of sedation, the investigators expect a decrease in the time to extubation in patients sedated with isoflurane as well as a better quality of awakening with a decrease in resuscitation delirium. This shortened duration of mechanical ventilation could have beneficial effects on the morbidity associated with prolonged sedation and ventilation: reduction of pneumopathies acquired under mechanical ventilation, reduction of the length of stay in resuscitation and hospitalization.
In intensive care, sedation of patients is frequently used for their management. Combined with analgesia, it provides the comfort essential for the implementation of certain therapies such as mechanical ventilation. Classically, sedation is based on the combination of a hypnotic and an injectable morphine, most often midazolam and sufentanil. Midazolam is a benzodiazepine with many advantages: few hemodynamic effects, no limited duration of use and good workability. However, its use presents several difficulties in resuscitation: 1. Some patients have accelerated metabolism and resistance to benzodiazepines, either through chronic use of psychotropic or narcotic drugs. These patients develop tolerance phenomena due to enzyme induction. This tachyphylaxis leads to an increased need for midazolam to achieve the therapeutic goal. 2. Some pathologies, such as ARDS, require deep sedation in the initial phase, which may last several days. After this phase, prolonged sedation may be necessary before achieving sufficient improvement to allow sedation to be stopped. 3. The metabolism of midazolam is dependent on liver function and its elimination from renal function. Alteration of these functions, common in resuscitation, results in impaired elimination with accumulation of midazolam and 2 active metabolites, 1-hydroxy-midazolam and 1-hydroxy-midazolam-glucuronide. These three difficulties may lead to an undesirable prolongation of the sedation period beyond the cessation of midazolam infusion, which is associated with an increase in morbidity such as neuromyopathies, ventilator-associated pneumopathies (VAPP), deliriums and withdrawal syndromes. These complications increase the length of stay and mortality in intensive care units. For 30 years there has been a growing interest in the use of sedation in resuscitation with volatile halogenated agents (VHAs). These agents, administered by inhalation, have many advantages: short onset of action, good workability, effect not dependent on renal or hepatic function, almost exclusive and predictable respiratory elimination, absence of tachyphylaxis and metabolism not sensitive to enzyme induction. For these reasons, AVHs are widely used in anesthesia in the operating room. The hypnotic action of HVAs is closely correlated with the expired fraction of HVAs. Measured by gas analysers, it allows precise monitoring of the therapeutic effect. In contrast to resuscitation ventilators, all anesthesia ventilators are equipped with evaporation tanks and administration circuits, gas analyzers and associated facilities for their disposal. These technical constraints mean that, despite their many theoretical advantages, AVHs have not been used in resuscitation area. In the early 2000s, a new device made it possible to use AVH in intensive care: the AnaConDa® system. It made it possible to administer AVH using an evaporator inserted into the patient circuit at the intubation catheter, completely independent of the ventilator. However, this device had several shortcomings in terms of user safety and cost due to the short service life of the consumables. Since 2016, a new device is available in France: the MIRUS® (Pall Medical, Dreieich, Germany). It has several advantages over AnaConDa® : - It is equipped with an integrated gas analyzer that allows the automatic adjustment of the AVH flow rate for a concentration target (FeAVH target). This results in greater safety and AVH savings, - For each AVH with an MA (isoflurane, sevoflurane or desflurane), there is a MIRUS controller with a tank model with a coding and color-coding system to avoid medication errors, - Filters and reflectors can be used for several days, thus reducing the cost of use. Among the recent AVHs and as for its use in anesthesia, isoflurane has shown a safety of use in resuscitation on longer uses up to 96 hours without side effects. A recent retrospective study showed no excess mortality after prolonged use of isoflurane (minimum 96 hours, average 506 hours) in post-operative, mainly digestive surgery in patients with sepsis with an average age of 71 years. After medium-length sedation (average duration 52 hours, maximum 96 hours), the recovery and extubation times are shorter than with intravenous sedation with midazolam: 10 minutes versus 250 minutes for the extubation time, but with significant differences in sedation and analgesia protocol compared to our practices. The AVHs have moreover been included in the German recommendations on sedation in resuscitation. This monocentric, prospective, controlled, randomized, single-blind study will be conducted in surgical resuscitation at the Rouen University Hospital. The aim of our research project is to evaluate the time to extubation after sedation with inhaled isoflurane compared to conventional intravenous sedation with midazolam, in patients requiring prolonged sedation (3 to 28 days) in a context of septic shock. This population is particularly at risk of hypnotic accumulation due to the prolonged duration of use and the increased risk of developing renal or hepatic impairment in connection with septic shock. Based on data from the literature on shorter durations of up to 96 hours of sedation, the investigators expect a decrease in the time to extubation in patients sedated with isoflurane as well as a better quality of awakening with a decrease in resuscitation delirium. This shortened duration of mechanical ventilation could have beneficial effects on the morbidity associated with prolonged sedation and ventilation: reduction of pneumopathies acquired under mechanical ventilation, reduction of the length of stay in resuscitation and hospitalization. ;
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