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Sepsis is the leading cause of death in critically ill patients in the United States. It develops in approximately 750,000 Americans annually, and more than 210,000 of them die. Despite improvements in supportive treatment, mortality has changed very little, and until recently, no sepsis-specific treatments were available. Protease inhibitors have seemed to have an immune benefit that extends beyond their ability to prevent HIV replication. T cells in those patients treated with protease inhibitors have reduced rates of death than in those patients not receiving therapy.
Full description
Our hypothesis is that protease inhibitor therapy will prevent apoptosis associated with sepsis, and this will be manifested as improved clinical outcome, as assessed by 28-day mortality, APACHE II and III, and SOFA scores. All patients enrolled in the study will receive the standard of care for sepsis at Mayo Clinic Rochester. Patients will receive 1250 mg of Nelfinavir/placebo twice each day for seven days with regularly scheduled blood draws (Days 0, 4, and 7).
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Infection criteria:known or suspected infection, as evidenced by one or more of the following: WBC in normally sterile body fluid, radiographic evidence of pneumonia, a syndrome associated with a high risk of infection.
Modified SIRS criteria: must meet three or more of the following four criteria: a temperature higher than 38C or lower than 36C, heart rate of more than 90 beats/minute, respiratory rate of more than 20 breaths/minute (or on a mechanical ventilator), WBC more than 12,000/mm(3) or less than 4,000/mm(3).
Dysfunctional organs criteria:must meet one or more of the following five criteria:cardiovascular system dysfunction, kidney dysfunction, respiratory dysfunction, hematological dysfunction, unexplained metabolic acidosis.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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