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Frequency, Predictors and Outcome of Sepsis Induced Coagulopathy in Critical Care Unit

A

Assiut University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Coagulopathy

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06586346
Sepsis induced coagulopathy

Details and patient eligibility

About

In intensive care units , sepsis remains one of the common causes of mortality and morbidity . The average hospital length of stay for sepsis is twice as long as any other fatal condition . Furthermore, sepsis survivors are at an increased risk of death or a reduced health related quality of life even after discharge from the hospital . Sepsis induces multiple and complex derangements in many systems including the coagulation cascade. The vast majority of septic patients present with hemostatic abnormalities ranging from subclinical coagulopathy to fulminant disseminated intravascular coagulation . During the initial stages of infection coagulation operates as a natural defense mechanism attempting to confine the responsible pathogen and prevent its spread into systematic circulation. However in advanced and severe infections as in sepsis, mass inflammatory cytokine production and release into the circulation lead to significantly deranged hemostatic balance . The coagulation process is activated while anticoagulant mechanisms including fibrinolysis and anticoagulant factors are suppressed. Consequently septic patients are prone to a prothrombotic state through four main mechanisms extrinsic pathway activation, cytokine induced coagulation amplification, anticoagulant pathways suppression, and fibrinolysis impairment .

Full description

Sepsis is defined as a life-threatening syndrome associated with physiological, pathological and biological abnormalities caused by a dysregulated host response to infections . Globally, there are ∼48.9 million sepsis cases, leading to 11 million deaths annually .

In intensive care units , sepsis remains one of the common causes of mortality and morbidity . The average hospital length of stay for sepsis is twice as long as any other fatal condition and the in-hospital mortality remains as high as 20% . Furthermore, sepsis survivors are at an increased risk of death or a reduced health-related quality of life even after discharge from the hospital .

Sepsis induces multiple and complex derangements in many systems, including the coagulation cascade. The vast majority of septic patients present with hemostatic abnormalities, ranging from subclinical coagulopathy to fulminant disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) . During the initial stages of infection, coagulation operates as a natural defense mechanism, attempting to confine the responsible pathogen and prevent its spread into systematic circulation. However, in advanced and severe infections, as in sepsis, mass inflammatory cytokine production and release into the circulation lead to significantly deranged hemostatic balance . The coagulation process is activated, while anticoagulant mechanisms, including fibrinolysis and anticoagulant factors, are suppressed. Consequently, septic patients are prone to a prothrombotic state through 4 main mechanisms: extrinsic pathway activation, cytokine-induced coagulation amplification, anticoagulant pathways suppression, and fibrinolysis

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients with 18 years of ago or older who will be admitted to critical care unit with sepsis during period between october 2024 and october 2026.

Exclusion criteria

  • patients under tge age of 18patients with end organ diseases
  • pregnant woman
  • patient with coagulation disorder
  • patient using anticoagulant drugs

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Amira Ahmed; Mahmoud Ali, Pro

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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