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Septic shock is associated with substantial burden in terms of both mortality and morbidity for survivors of this illness. Pre-clinical sepsis studies suggest that mesenchymal stem (stromal) cells may modulate inflammation, enhance pathogen clearance and tissue repair and reduce death. Our team has completed a Phase I dose escalation and safety clinical trial that evaluated mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in patients with septic shock. The Cellular Immunotherapy for Septic Shock (CISS) trial established that MSCs appear safe and that a randomized controlled trial (RCT) is feasible. Based on these data, the investigators have planned a phase II RCT (CISS2) at several Canadian academic centres which will evaluate safety, signals for clinical efficacy, and continue to examine potential mechanisms of action and biological effects of MSCs in septic shock.
Full description
Septic shock is a devastating illness and the most severe form of infection seen in the intensive care unit (ICU). It is characterized by cardiovascular collapse, failure of organs and is common with severe repercussions including a mortality of 20-40%. Survivors suffer long-term impairment in function and reduced quality of life (QOL). Despite decades of research examining different immune therapies, none has proven successful and supportive care remains the mainstay of therapy, at a cost of approximately 4-billion dollars in Canada annually. MSCs represent a potentially novel treatment for sepsis because in animal models, MSCs have been shown to modulate the immune system, increase pathogen clearance, restore organ function, and reduce death.
The Phase II multi-centre Cellular Immunotherapy for Septic Shock RCT (CISS2) will continue to evaluate safety, assess if there are signals for clinical efficacy and determine mechanisms of action and biological effects of MSCs in septic shock. To answer these aims, CISS2 will randomize 114 patients who are admitted to the ICU with septic shock to 300 million cryopreserved, allogeneic, bone marrow derived MSCs or placebo across 10 Canadian centres over approximately 2 years.
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Inclusion criteria
A participant must meet all three inclusion criteria to be eligible:
Admission to an Intensive Care Unit AND
Cardiovascular failure that is present within the first 24 hours of admission to the ICU and is defined by the requirement for at least 15 mcg/min of norepinephrine or at least 200 mcg/min of phenylephrine or at least 0.03 U/min of vasopressin, or a combination of norepinephrine and phenylephrine that is equivalent to the total required doses (e.g. norepinephrine 8 meq/min and phenylephrine 100 mcg/min) for at least 4 consecutive hours. Participants must still require vasopressor(s) at the time of MSC infusion to be eligible. AND
At least 1 additional organ failure, or organ hypoperfusion, as defined by the modified Multiple Organ Dysfunction Score (MODS). Criteria for organ dysfunction or organ hypoperfusion must be met within the first 24 hours of ICU admission. These include:
Acute organ failures that meet eligibility criteria cannot have been present for more than 48 hours prior to admission to the ICU.
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114 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Josee Champagne
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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