Severe Sepsis With Septic Shock Clinical Trial
— ECSISSOfficial title:
Evaluating a CytoSorb Score in Septic Shock - a Retrospective Multicenter Data Analysis
NCT number | NCT03977688 |
Other study ID # | 20194 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Completed |
Phase | |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | March 1, 2019 |
Est. completion date | December 30, 2019 |
Verified date | February 2020 |
Source | Klinikum Emden |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Observational |
Systemic hyperinflammatory states, e.g. triggered by infection/sepsis, represent a major
challenge for modern medicine. After an initially localized onset, inflammation can extend to
an excessive, uncontrolled inflammatory reaction affecting the entire body and can trigger
circulatory failure with subsequent irreversible multiple organ failure. Despite all the
medical advances made in recent years, sepsis continues to be a substantial problem, as
almost all therapeutic approaches have failed to prove their efficacy to date. Mortality in
this clinical entity thus remains extremely high. In Germany alone, more than 100,000 people
suffer from sepsis or septic shock every year, nearly half of whom die despite optimal
therapy. Thus, sepsis is the third most common cause of death, has major importance both from
a medical but also from an economical viewpoint, and approaches that could contribute to its
successful treatment need to be further developed and explored.
If a patient experiences the spread of bacteria or their constituents in the blood stream due
to an uncontrolled source of infection, the result is a deliberately triggered physiological
defense reaction of the body. In many patients, however, there is a pathological
dysregulation of these mechanisms, in a way that the defense reaction goes far beyond the
physiological level required, resulting in an excessive immune response of the body, which is
mainly facilitated by inflammatory mediators such as cytokines and chemokines. The immune
response spreads throughout the body and also dissipates into organs unaffected by the
original infection. In cases of such unwanted overshooting immune responses, an attempt to
regain control of the described deleterious systemic events seems reasonable by removing the
excess amount of cytokines from the blood, thus preventing or treating organ failure.
In this context, current therapeutic approaches increasingly focus on the elimination of
inflammatory mediators.
In recent years, hemoadsorption, using a new adsorber (CytoSorb), has been used to treat
sepsis and other conditions of hyperinflammation. The advantage of this therapeutic principle
is that a wide range of inflammatory mediators are removed. In conjunction with the enormous
elimination capacity, the effective and rapid reduction of mediators can be achieved.
To date, there have been more than 61,000 treatments using this procedure worldwide without
device-related side effects being reported. The investigators have been treating patients
with this procedure for over 5 years with consistently very favorable results. Therefore, the
investigators would like to expand and deepen their observations with the proposed project.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 500 |
Est. completion date | December 30, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | May 30, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - septic shock according Sepsis 3 criteria Exclusion Criteria: - no data available, no icu treatment |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Germany | Klinikum Emden | Emden | Lower Saxony |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Klinikum Emden | Kantonsspital Baden, Kantonsspital Münsterlingen, Universitätsklinikum Hamburg-Eppendorf |
Germany,
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Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Hospital mortality | through study completion, an average of 49 days | ||
Secondary | Icu mortality | through study completion, an average of 49 days |
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