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Clinical Trials/NCT05140772
NCT05140772
Unknown
Phase 2

Evaluations the Effect of Parenteral Glutamine on Reducing Infection Morbidity in Burn Patients in ICU. A Randomized Controlled Double-blind Study.

Menoufia University1 site in 1 country60 target enrollmentJune 1, 2020

Overview

Phase
Phase 2
Intervention
Dipeptiven
Conditions
Drug Effect
Sponsor
Menoufia University
Enrollment
60
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
wound culture test
Last Updated
4 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The study is designed to evaluate the effect of parenteral glutamine supplementation on infection in burn patients.

Detailed Description

Despite improvements in prevention and management, burn injury continues to represent a major threat to the health and welfare of people worldwide in all age groups. Even with early surgical intervention and aggressive antibiotic therapy, infectious complications are a major cause of death in severe burn injury, accounting for 75% of all deaths occurring after initial resuscitation. It is proposed that one source of these infections is a translocation of gram-negative bacteria from the gut. However, this mechanism of bacterial translocation through the gut wall remains a controversial mechanism of infection in humans. In animal studies, it has been demonstrated that glutamine supplementation can decrease gut-derived bacterial translocation and improve outcomes from burn injury. Whether this holds true in humans has to be evaluated by additional studies. A recent study concluded that glutamine supplementation reduces gram-negative bacteremia in burned patients but viewed itself as preliminary and suggested that more clinical trials are warranted to corroborate the study outcome.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
June 1, 2020
End Date
December 1, 2021
Last Updated
4 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

ashraf magdy eskandr

assistant professor of anesthesia

Menoufia University

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Age between 18-50 years.
  • Total burn surface area of 20% - 60%.
  • Expected length of stay in ICU \> 48 hr.
  • Admission within 72 hrs of burn injury.
  • Any thermal injury such as flame burns. Scald burns and contact burns.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Burn patients with hepatic failure.
  • Burn patient with Severe renal failure (glomerular filtration rate (eGFR \<50 ml/min).
  • Patients with inborn errors of amino-acid metabolism (e.g., phenylketonuria).
  • Burn patients with pre-existing severe cardiac, pulmonary diseases.
  • Burn patients with diabetes mellitus or cancer.
  • Patients with metabolic acidosis (pH\<7.35).
  • Electric burns.

Arms & Interventions

group I

Patient were received 0.5gm/kg/day IV glutamine infusion (dipeptiven 100ml contains 20 g N(2)-L-alanyl-L-glutamine (= 8.20 g L-alanine, 13.46 g L-glutamine) Water for Injections).

Intervention: Dipeptiven

group II

Patients received an equivalent volume of normal saline daily for 7 days.

Intervention: normal Saline

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

wound culture test

Time Frame: on 1,5,10 and 15 days after ICU admission

whether +ve or -ve test

Secondary Outcomes

  • Procalcitonin level(on 1,5,10 and 15 days after ICU admission)
  • CRP(on 1,5,10 and 15 days after ICU admission)

Study Sites (1)

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