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Investigation of the Role of Brain Natriuretic Peptide and Lactate in Early Goal-directed Therapy for Patients With Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock

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National Taiwan University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Septic Shock
Sepsis

Treatments

Other: check BNP and lactate

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01539551
201111015RIB

Details and patient eligibility

About

B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) is a cardiac neurohormone which rapidly released by the ventricle in response to myocardial stretch. BNP has been used as a biomarker of sepsis related cardiac dysfunction and volume overload in critical ill patients. It is also a marker associated with prognosis in patients with severe sepsis and septic shock. However, the clinical utility of BNP level in management of early severe sepsis and septic shock over the first 48 hours is not clear. Besides, Lactate represents as a maker of tissue hypoperfusion, which has been used as a guide therapy for sepsis patients and high serum lactate level is independently associated with mortality in severe sepsis. Today, in management of early severe sepsis and septic shock, current guideline emphasize the early goal-directed therapy (EGDT) with achieving the central venous pressure (CVP) level 8-12 mmHg by fluid support first, then targeting the next goal to maintain mean airway pressure (MAP) at least 65 mmHg by vasopressor agent (ie, Norepinephrine) and finally keeping central venous oxyhemoglobin saturation (ScvO2) > 70% via optimal Hct > 30% and dobutamine usage within first 6 hours of emergency department admission. However, the role of BNP and lactate in patients with severe sepsis and septic shock with or without myocardial dysfunction under EGDT management are not clear.

The investigators will conduct a prospective observational study to investigate the change of BNP and Lactate within 48 hours in early severe sepsis and septic shock under EGDT management, their association of cardiac dysfunction and their role in predicting various clinical outcome. The investigators also want to see if BNP and lactate could be useful tools to guide the adjustment of optimal fluid supply and the timing of inotropic agent intervention.

Enrollment

300 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients > 18 years old
  • Severe sepsis with or without septic shock

Exclusion criteria

  1. Previous known heart failure or cardiomyopathy history
  2. Acute coronary syndrome
  3. Clinical pulmonary hypertension with various cause (iPAH, congenital heart disease, CTEPH, COPD with cor pulmonale)
  4. Patients with acute pulmonary embolism
  5. Chronic Af with LVH
  6. Acute cerebral vascular event
  7. Respiratory failure with high PEEP > 10 cmH2O)
  8. Various cancer with distant metastasis
  9. Patients with Bosmin therapy
  10. Patients received CPR (IHCA or OHCA)
  11. Massive GI bleeding or hypovolemic shock
  12. Pregnancy
  13. Contraindication to central venous catheterization
  14. Drug overdose
  15. Burn injury, trauma patients
  16. A requirement for immediate surgery
  17. Liver cirrhosis child C

Trial design

300 participants in 1 patient group

1
Description:
sepsis and septic shock patients
Treatment:
Other: check BNP and lactate

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Yen-Fu Chen, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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