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Clinical Trials/NCT02711098
NCT02711098
Completed
Phase 3

InterLeukine Ancillary Study of the Therapeutic Hypothermia After Nonshockable Cardiac Arrest Trial.

Centre Hospitalier Departemental Vendee6 sites in 1 country116 target enrollmentMarch 2016
ConditionsCardiac Arrest

Overview

Phase
Phase 3
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Cardiac Arrest
Sponsor
Centre Hospitalier Departemental Vendee
Enrollment
116
Locations
6
Primary Endpoint
Interleukine 6 level between H0 and H72
Status
Completed
Last Updated
7 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Cardiac arrest is at present a major cause of mortality as well as a cause of disability for the surviving victims.In Europe, every year counts as 300,000 cardiac arrests responsible for 250,000 deaths. Thus, less than 20 % of patients discharged home with impaired quality of life associated with symptoms of tiredness, stress, anxiety. The prognosis is related to the initial cardiac rhythm present during the initiation of resuscitation. Recent progress in the improvement of mortality and neurological outcome has been achieved over the last decade thanks to the systematic implementation of a period of targeted temperature control between 32 and 34 ° C in patients who benefited from the realization of at least one electrical external shock.

There are theoretical and clinical arguments to think that achieving the same way a period of targeted temperature control between 32 and 34 ° C in patients treated for cardiac arrest with a non- shockable rhythm on arrival can also benefit from this procedure. However other arguments are against this hypothesis including an increase in the risk of infection , worsening of the patient's hemodynamic status with no benefit to him. To answer this question, we conduce a randomized multicenter study testing the potential improvement of neurological outcome through this procedure targeted temperature control between 32.5 and 33.5 ° C in these patients.

IL Ancillary Study of HYPERION Trial will determine impact on inflammatory biomarkers of two temperature target for targeted temperature management (33°C or 37°C) after cardiac arrest in non-shockable rhythm.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
March 2016
End Date
January 14, 2018
Last Updated
7 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Cardiac arrest in nonshockable rhythm and
  • Glasgow Coma Scale score ≤
  • In patients receiving sedative therapy at ICU admission, the Glasgow Coma Scale score assessed by the emergency physician just before sedative therapy initiation is used.
  • Patient must be randomized in a center which participate in the ancillary study.

Exclusion Criteria

  • No-flow time \>10 min (time from collapse to initiation of external cardiac massage);
  • Low-flow time \>60 min (time from initiation of external cardiac massage to return of spontaneous circulation).
  • Major hemodynamic instability (defined as a continuous epinephrine or norepinephrine infusion at a flow rate \>1 μg/Kg/min)
  • Time from cardiac arrest to study inclusion \>300 min
  • Moribund patient
  • Child C cirrhosis of the liver
  • Age \<18 years
  • Pregnant or breastfeeding woman
  • Correctional facility inmate
  • Previous inclusion in another randomized clinical trial on cardiac arrest with day-90 neurological outcome as the primary endpoint

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Interleukine 6 level between H0 and H72

Time Frame: 72 hours

Comparing the production of interleukin 6 (inflammatory cytokine) during targeted temperature management at 33 or 37 °C after cardiac arrest in non-shockable rhythm when help arrived and before the injection of adrenaline. The analysis of the primary endpoint will be performed using an analysis of covariance, taking into account the basal value of interleukine 6. Necessary data will be pre-processed.

Study Sites (6)

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