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Cirrhotic patients with sepsis represent a very sick subset of patients and septic shock in such patients is associated with high mortality. Early initiation of intravenous fluids and antibiotics is the key to management in these patients. The choice of fluid in cirrhotic patients with sepsis induced hypotension has been studied in the past. The choice of fluid, crystalloid vs colloid, for resuscitation in such patients has been a matter of debate. In the previous study, the ALPS trial, 20% albumin use was associated with a better reversal of hypotension but was associated with an increased incidence of pulmonary complications and 5% albumin was better when compared to normal saline(FRISC study) for fluid resuscitation. No study in the past has evaluated 5% albumin against 20% albumin in combination with crystalloid. Investigator aim to study the efficacy and safety of 20% albumin with plasmalyte against 5 % albumin for fluid resuscitation in cirrhotic patients with sepsis induced hypotension.
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Hypothesis: Combination of 20% albumin with plasmalyte could be better than 5% albumin for fluid resuscitation in critically ill cirrhosis patients due to less incidence of hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis, dyselectrolytemia, fluid overload, and due to its cost effectiveness.
Aim: To compare the efficacy and safety of 20% albumin plus plasmalyte against 5% albumin for reversal of sepsis induced hypotension at 3 hrs in cirrhosis patients
Primary objective: To compare the efficacy of 20% albumin combined with plasmalyte against 5% albumin for reversal of shock at 3 hours after initiation of fluids in cirrhosis patients with sepsis induced hypotension
Secondary objectives:
Methodology:
Study population:
Study design: Monocentric open label randomised controlled study. The study will be conducted in Department of Hepatology, ILBS.
Study period: 1 year
Sample size: Based on the previous studies on 5% albumin and 20% albumin on fluid resuscitation, assuming that the reversal rate is approximately 11% with 5% Albumin, and 40% with 20% Albumin plus plasmalyte with alpha 5 and power 90. Investigator need to enrol 106 cases, with further 10% dropouts, it is decided to enrol 120 cases, i.e., 60 in each arm allocated randomly by block randomization method taking a block size of 10. Patients will be evaluated in ER for cirrhosis and sepsis induced hypotension
Intervention Patients after screening for all exclusion criteria will be randomised into 2 arms (group-1, receiving combination of 20% Albumin and plasmalyte) and (group-2, receiving 5% Albumin) in a ratio 1:1
Monitoring and assessment Both the groups will undergo baseline investigations including CBC, KFT, LFT, INR, Chest Xray Urine routine and microscopy, sepsis screening including blood culture, urine culture, procalcitonin, ROTEM analysis, ABG analysis, baseline 2decho, ECG, MAP, Heart rate and urine output will be monitored hourly until the reversal of shock.
Arterial lactate will be measured at 0 hours, and 3, 6, 12, 24 and 48 hours post-intervention, lactate clearance will be calculated as ([lactate initial - lactate delayed]/[lactate initial] x 100%).
IAP will be measured at baseline and at 6 hourly intervals Reversal of shock - sustained increase in MAP above 65 mmHg without the use of vasopressors.
In case of failure to attain a sustained MAP >65 mmHg, Fluid boluses will be administered guided by lung ultrasound and IVC Patients who did not attain MAP >65 mmHg after the 3 hours or with non responsiveness to fluid boluses will be initiated on vasopressors. Norepinephrine will be commenced at a rate of 7.5 µg/kg/min and gradually increased to a maximum dose of 60 µg/kg/min. Cumulative dose of norepinephrine will be recorded The patients unable to maintain a MAP of more than 65 mmHg despite the highest amount of the single vasopressor will be assigned to salvage therapy. The salvage therapy will included a combination of norepinephrine with another vasopressor (either terlipressin or vasopressin) and low dose hydrocortisone.
Same fluid will be continued in each group for 24 hours. In maintenance doses, 5% albumin will be given at a maintenance dose of 50ml/hr in 5% albumin group and plasmalyte at 100ml/hr in combination arm. Cumulative fluid administered in both groups will be recorded.
Antibiotics will be initiated on an empirical basis as per our institute's microbiological epidemiology and will be revised, if necessary, based on culture positivity.
Electrolyte correction will be given as per the requirement Enteral or parenteral nutrition depending upon tolerance will be initiated. Anti-coma measures will be given for hepatic encephalopathy and RRT for standard renal indications which will include metabolic acidosis, fluid overload, hyperkalemia, and advanced uremia Time to initiation of RRT for both groups will be recorded.
Lung ultrasound and IVC will be performed at baseline and at hrly intervals for 3 hours and subsequently at 6hrly intervals for 1 day Fluid boluses will be administered based on the IVC and lung ultrasound - IVC < 15 IVCCI>40%(spontaneously breathing patients) and IVCDI>18%(Mechanically ventilated patients), and A profile on lung ultrasound Threshold(stopping rule) for fluid boluses (IVC >25) IVCCI <40% in spontaneously breathing patients and IVCDI<18% in mechanically ventilated patients, or B profile on lung ultrasound
Stopping rule:
STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: Continuous data- Student's t test
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120 participants in 2 patient groups
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Dr Ayush Jain, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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