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ASpirin for Patients With SEPsis and SeptIc Shock (ASP-SEPSIS)

F

Federal University of São Paulo

Status and phase

Terminated
Phase 2

Conditions

Sepsis

Treatments

Drug: Aspirin

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01784159
EPM81449

Details and patient eligibility

About

This Randomized, pragmatic, multicentric with blinding of patients and health professionals, intention-to-treat analysis has by primary endpoint to evaluate whether the aspirin use reduces the intensity of organic dysfunction measured by the variation of the SOFA score starting from the day of admission to the seventh day. Secundary endpoint: To evaluate if the aspirin use reduces the time of mechanical ventilation, length of stay in the ICU and in the hospital. In addition, to evaluate the safety of its administration regarding the occurrence of bleeding.

The data will be collected directly from the chart of the patients admitted to the ICU.

Data quality assurance will be made through periodic verification, aiming for complete and consistent data. The centers will receive periodic reports for adequacy of potentially inconsistent or incomplete data.

The baseline SOFA of patients with sepsis is 8.8 with a standard deviation of 3. The expected reduction in the control group in the SOFA at day 7 is 2 points. Considering a power of 80% and a level of significance of 0.05, it is estimated that 109 patients will be needed in each group. A total of 218 patients will compose the sample.

All analyzes will follow the intention-to-treat principle. We will evaluate the effect of aspirin compared to placebo on primary and binary outcomes by means of relative risks, 95% confidence intervals and chi-square tests. For continuous outcomes with normal distribution, we will present the mean difference, 95% confidence interval and P value calculated by t test. For continuous outcomes with asymmetric distribution, we will perform Wilcoxon test.

Full description

Design Randomized, pragmatic, multicentric with blinding of patients and health professionals.

Bias control Allocation secrecy with web randomization. Blinding of patients and health professionals. Intention-to-treat analysis.

Primary endpoint To evaluate whether the aspirin use reduces the intensity of organic dysfunction measured by the variation of the SOFA score starting from the day of admission to the seventh day.

Secondary endpoint To evaluate if the aspirin use reduces the time of mechanical ventilation, time with vasopressors, time in renal replacement therapy, length of stay in the ICU and in the hospital. In addition, to evaluate the safety of its administration regarding the occurrence of bleeding.

Eligibility

Inclusion criteria:

The three criteria below must be present:

  1. Signature of informed consent

  2. Patients must be older than 18 years old

  3. Diagnosis of sepsis and/or septic shock for less than 48 hours with at least one of the following organ dysfunctions:

    • Lactate above 4mmol/L (36mg/dL)
    • Thrombocytopenia < 100,000/mm3 or reduction > 50% in the count in the last 3 days
    • PaO2/FiO2 < 200 without signs of apparent volume overload
    • Hypotension MAP < 65mmHg refractory to volume replacement with the need to use vasopressor

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Pregnancy
  2. Impossibility to use the intestinal tract
  3. Death perspective in less than 24 hours
  4. Patients in the end of their lives or in exclusive palliative care
  5. Patients with active bleeding
  6. Prior study participation
  7. Known allergy to aspirin
  8. Active peptic ulcer
  9. Previous use of antiplatelet agents in the last 7 days
  10. Previous use of AINEs in the last 7 days, except for dipyrone.
  11. Hemorrhagic stroke in the last 7 days or central nervous system surgery in the last 72 hours.
  12. Platelets <30,000 cells/mm3.
  13. Large surgery in the last 24 hours if the attending surgeon judges that the risk of bleeding is high enough that aspirin cannot be used.
  14. Ophthalmologic surgery postoperative and transurethral resection of the prostate at the discretion of the attending physician.
  15. Hepatic cirrhosis or previous liver disease with altered prothrombin activity, manifested by INR above 2.0 or other previous coagulopathies.
  16. Severe head injury in the last 7 days.
  17. Use or indication of anticoagulation.

Study intervention The treatments to be compared in the study are a dose of 200 mg of aspirin daily for 7 days and placebo. Both look identical.

Study outcomes

Primary outcomes:

• Variation of the SOFA score between D7 and D1

Secondary outcomes:

  • Death in the ICU
  • Days free of mechanical ventilation within 28 days
  • Days free of vasopressor within 28 days
  • Length of ICU stay
  • Length of hospital stay
  • Renal injury KDIGO >= 2 within 7 days
  • Renal replacement therapy use
  • Major bleeding occurency
  • Count of unitis of red blood cells received in 14 days

Data management The data will be collected directly from the chart of the patients admitted to the ICU. Data quality assurance will be made through periodic verification, aiming for complete and consistent data. The centers will receive periodic reports for adequacy of potentially inconsistent or incomplete data.

Statistics The baseline SOFA of patients with sepsis is 8.8 with a standard deviation of 3. The expected reduction in the control group in the SOFA at day 7 is 2 points. Considering a power of 80% and a level of significance of 0.05, it is estimated that 109 patients will be needed in each group. A total of 218 patients will compose the sample.

Enrollment

167 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Eligibility - patients:

Inclusion criteria:

The three criteria below must be present:

  1. Signature of informed consent

  2. Patients must be older than 18 years old

  3. Diagnosis of sepsis and/or septic shock for less than 48 hours with at least one of the following organ dysfunctions:

    • Lactate above 4mmol/L (36mg/dL)
    • Thrombocytopenia < 100,000/mm3 or reduction > 50% in the count in the last 3 days
    • PaO2/FiO2 < 200 without signs of apparent volume overload
    • Hypotension MAP < 65mmHg refractory to volume replacement with the need to use vasopressor
    • Acute renal injury increased by 2.0 to 2.9 times from baseline or diuresis rate less than 0.5ml/kg/h for more than 12 hours

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Pregnancy
  2. Impossibility to use the intestinal tract
  3. Death perspective in less than 24 hours
  4. Patients in the end of their lives or in exclusive palliative care
  5. Patients with active bleeding
  6. Prior study participation
  7. Known allergy to aspirin
  8. Active peptic ulcer
  9. Previous use of antiplatelet agents in the last 7 days
  10. Previous use of AINEs in the last 7 days, except for dipyrone.
  11. Hemorrhagic stroke in the last 7 days or central nervous system surgery in the last 72 hours.
  12. Platelets <30,000 cells/mm3.
  13. Large surgery in the last 24 hours if the attending surgeon judges that the risk of bleeding is high enough that aspirin cannot be used.
  14. Ophthalmologic surgery postoperative and transurethral resection of the prostate at the discretion of the attending physician.
  15. Hepatic cirrhosis or previous liver disease with altered prothrombin activity, manifested by INR above 2.0 or other previous coagulopathies.
  16. Severe head injury in the last 7 days.
  17. Use or indication of anticoagulation

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

167 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Placebo
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Placebo 1tb / day/ 7days
Treatment:
Drug: Aspirin
Aspirin
Active Comparator group
Description:
Intervention aspirin 200 mg/day for 7 days
Treatment:
Drug: Aspirin

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Thiago ML Almeida

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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