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Interest of the Balance of Pro-coagulating and Profibrinolytis Activities of the Microparticles (MP) in the Prognosis of Septic Shock

P

Public Assistance-Hospitals of Marseille (AP-HM)

Status

Unknown

Conditions

the Performance Used to Evaluate the Principal Objective Are Technical Performances, Sensibility and Specificity of the Tests
the Coagulolytic Balance
the Mortality Rate

Treatments

Biological: blood draw

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02062970
2013-36 (Other Identifier)
2013-A01251-44

Details and patient eligibility

About

Septic shock is a clinical syndrome occurring in 10 to 20% of patients admitted in ICV. Mortality associated to septic shock varies from 30 to 50%. It follows a systemic response of the organism to a severe infection, associated with a circulatory failure marker by an arterial hypotension and a vascular hyperactivity to vasoconstrictor agents.

The mechanisms involved on one hand an activation of white blood cells inflammatory system and the vascular inflammatory system; and on the other hand on imbalance in hemostatis characterized by an activation of the coagulation and an inappropriate fibrinolysis leading to a disruption of microcirculation in the context of a disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIVC).

This inflammatory and thrombotic cellular activation is strongly associated with the phenomenon of vesiculation; leading to the production of cellular microparticles (MP) by blood cells and vascular cells.

MP are membranous vesicles, resulting in the reassortment of membrane phospholides in response to an activation of cellular apoptosis. They have been initially described as new actors of hemostatis. Indeed, the expression of phospholipid serine and tissular factor (TF) confer them a procoagulating activity, which increases in patients undergoing septic shock.

The finding of a fibriniolytic activity of the cellular MP suggests the existence of compensating mechanisms with a procoagulating activity. This confers to MP a key-role in the control of the coagulolytic balance.

Our recent researches suggest that endothelial and white blood cells MP produce in vivo plasmin.

They carry into the main circulation a fibrinolytic activity which is partially beyond the physiological inhibitors activity (PAI-1, x 2 antiplasmin). Preliminary findings show that this ability of plasmin generation is important in patients affected with septic shock.

Our hypothesis is that an increase in plasmin generation by MP compensates the risk of occurrence of microthrombosis, modulating therefore the vital prognosis of patients with septic shock.

The coagulolytic balance of MP, which is resulting of their own procoagulating and fibrinolytic activities could claim the status of new pronostic marker relevant in patients with septic shock.

Enrollment

230 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patient with septic shock

Exclusion criteria

  • age under 18 yo
  • pregnant woman
  • septic shock since more than 24 hours
  • patient hospitalized for cardiac arrest
  • immunocompromised patients
  • patient in whom the stop of active therapeutic is discuss
  • patient treated with an anti-coagulant at therapeutic dose

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

230 participants in 1 patient group

septic shock patients suffering
Experimental group
Description:
blood sample done in a population whom suffer of septic shock
Treatment:
Biological: blood draw

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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