Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Acute circulatory failure (shock) is defined as insufficient oxygen transport to meet the oxygen requirements of organs and tissues. Vasoplegic shock is the most frequent cause of shock, defined by vasoplegia and a drop in arterial pressure with preserved cardiac output. The main aetiologies of vasoplegic shock are sepsis and post-operative vasoplegia. Symptomatic treatment of vasoplegic shock is based on vasopressors. The first-line vasopressor is norepinephrine. Refractory vasoplegic shock refers as high norepinephrine requirements. In patients with catecholamine-refractory vasoplegia, the use of vasopressin as a second-line treatment is proposed. The use of vasopressin could improve organ and tissue perfusion, improve renal function, accelerate shock reversal and reduce patients' exposure to catecholamines, and thus to their side effects.
Currently, there is a gap between evidence and guidelines/practice regarding vasopressin in patients with refractory vasoplegic shock:
The strengh of those recommendation is weak due to moderate quality of evidence highlighting the need to conduct a large randomized control trial on this topic.
We hypothesize that the use of vasopressin in patients with refractory vasoplegic shock may improve 30-day survival, decrease renal replacement therapy and reduce duration of vasopressor administration. This is the first multicentred study aiming to confirm the superiority of vasopressin in combination with norepinephrine over norepinephrine alone in this population.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Patients aged ≥ 18 years
Vasoplegic shock defined as patient requiring vasopressor at the time of inclusion AND with a cardiac index ≥ 2.3/L/min/m² [32] (measured by echocardiography, Swan-Ganz, pulse contour analysis or thermodilution) and with hyperlactatemia > 2 mmol/l.
Vasoplegia must be primarily caused by one of the following etiologies:
Refractory shock: dose of vasopressor (express as norepinephrine base equivalent) ≥ 0.25 μg/kg/min in order to maintain perfusion pressure within patient-defined targets (defined by the physician in charge of the patient).
Early intervention: Criteria for refractory AND vasoplegic shock reached for less than 12 hours.
Informed consent obtained from the patient or, if unable to give consent, a surrogate. If the surrogate is not available, emergency consent can be considered.
Covered by French national health insurance
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
390 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Maxime NGUYEN
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal