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About
The purpose of the study is to determine whether steroids decrease 28-day mortality in patients with septic shock.
Full description
The use of steroids in septic shock remains controversial. The purpose of this study is to determine whether hydrocortisone decreases 28-day mortality in patients with septic shock. The primary end point will be 28-day mortality in all the non-responders to ACTH (< or = 9 mcg/dl or 250 nmol/L post ACTH). Secondary endpoints will be 28 day all cause mortality in the total group and in responders, ICU and hospital mortality, one year mortality, organ system failure reversal especially shock, and duration of ICU and total hospitalisation.
In a double-blinded fashion (randomized on a 1:1 basis), patients receive 50 mg intravenously every 6 hours for 5 days. After 5 days, treatment will be tapered with 50 mg given intravenously every 12 hours for days 6-8, then 50 mg every 24 hours for days 9-11, and then stopped.
All concomitant treatments, including antibiotics, fluids, vasopressors and ancillary therapies will be given at the discretion of the primary care physician. Evidence-based guidelines for the management of severe sepsis and septic shock by the International Sepsis Forum (Intensive Care Med 2001;27:S124-S134) are encouraged to be followed.
All serious adverse events (SAE) which occur between days 0 and 28, which are unexpected and/or considered possibly or probably related to the study medication, must be documented and reported within 24 hours to the Safety and Efficacy Monitoring Committee. Non-serious adverse events will be listed on the case report form if they are unexpected and believed to be related to the study drug during days 0 to 14.
Specific adverse events which will be monitored closely because of their relationship to corticosteroids and shock are:
In addition, substudies will include harmonization of cortisol by comparing cortisol levels measured in local laboratories and a central laboratory, immune and neuro-endocrine interactions, neuromuscular weakness and cytokines.
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Inclusion criteria
Clinical evidence of infection within the previous 72 hours (may be present longer than 72 hours) (a, b, c, or d - only 1 required)
Evidence of a systemic response to infection as defined by the presence of two or more of the following signs within the previous 24 hours. These signs may be present longer than 72 hours.
Evidence of shock defined by (A + B- both required within the previous 72 hours (may NOT be present longer than 72 hours).
A. A systolic blood pressure < 90 mmHg or a decrease in SBP of more than 50 mmHg from baseline in previous hypertensive patients (for at least one hour) despite adequate fluid replacement OR need for vasopressors for at least one hour (infusion of dopamine ≥ 5 mcg/kg/min or any dose of adrenaline, noradrenaline, phenylephrine or vasopressin) to maintain a SBP ≥ 90 mmHg;
B. Hypoperfusion or organ dysfunction which is not the result of underlying diseases or drugs, but is attributable to sepsis, including one of the following:
Sustained oliguria (urine output < 0.5 ml/kg/hr for a minimum of 1 hour)
Metabolic acidosis [pH of < 7.3, or a base deficit of > or = 5.0 mmol/L, or an increased lactic acid concentration (> 2 mmol/L)].
Arterial hypoxemia (Pa02/FI02<280 in the absence of pneumonia)(Pa02/FI02<200 in the presence of pneumonia).
Thrombocytopenia - platelet count ≤ 100,000 cells/mm3.
Acute altered mental status (Glasgow Coma Scale < 14 or acute change from baseline).
Informed Consent
Cortisol level at baseline and 60 minutes after 0.25 mg cosyntropin
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
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500 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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