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Clinical Trials/NCT03461900
NCT03461900
Completed
Not Applicable

Guided Fluid-balance Optimization With Mini-fluid chALlenge During Septic Shock: A Multicenter, Stepped Wedge Cluster Randomized Trial

University Hospital, Brest17 sites in 1 country535 target enrollmentJune 4, 2019
ConditionsSeptic Shock

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Septic Shock
Sponsor
University Hospital, Brest
Enrollment
535
Locations
17
Primary Endpoint
Ventilator free days at day 28
Status
Completed
Last Updated
7 months ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Many observational studies have highlighted an independent association between fluid overload and clinical outcomes during septic shock. To optimize fluid balance, clinician has several options to consider carefully fluid administration and avoid fluid overload. More than a general restrictive approach, a pragmatic, individual tailored approach should be considered to optimize patients' hemodynamics during acute circulatory failure. Many advances in hemodynamic monitoring were described. Mini-fluid challenge appears to be a sensible method to use for bedside assessment to optimize fluid infusion. The next step for hemodynamic management in the ICU should be to test a hemodynamic goal-directed approach to better control fluid management and eventually improve patient's outcome. The main objective of the GOAL study is to evaluate a pragmatic optimization fluid management protocol tailored to each patient's hemodynamic status based on mini-fluid challenges. This intervention will be compared to usual management based on the latest guidelines. This intervention aims to decrease organ dysfunction during septic shock. This is the first large clinical trial designed to test this hypothesis.

Detailed Description

GOAL study is a stepped wedge cluster-randomized trial. Centers will switch randomly from the control to the intervention at regular intervals: * Control periods: Patients receive a usual optimization fluid management according to surviving sepsis campaign guidelines. * Interventional periods: Patients receive a pragmatic, protocolized and individual optimization fluid management according to validated components of a hemodynamic challenges called Mini-Fluid Challenge (MFC). Except fluid therapy in interventional group, management of sepsis will be at the discretion of the attending physician. The use of international guidelines for all therapeutic interventions is recommended in all patients whenever their group. All patients will be followed from enrolment to death or hospital discharge. If alive but not in the hospital after 28 days since septic shock, clinical outcomes will be evaluated by a visit with an intensivist or, if a physical examination is not possible, by a telephone interview performed by an intensivist. To ensure the same data collection in all centers, visits were planned: D0 (inclusion), D1 to D10 (in ICUs), D28 and D180. Classical blinded methods cannot be used in case of evaluation of an optimization protocol. Investigators are unblinded to which arm patient is randomized. To ensure the same evaluation for all patients and in all centers, all events recorded will be evaluated by an independent clinical event committee. All primary endpoints will be analyzed according to a hierarchized analysis to ensure comparison of multiple issues without considering type I error inflation. Secondary outcomes will be analyzed as exploratory analysis.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
June 4, 2019
End Date
January 8, 2024
Last Updated
7 months ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Adult patient (Age \> 18 years)
  • Admitted in ICU for less than 3 days.
  • Abdominal (excepted urinary tract infection) or pulmonary related septic shock, defined by SEPSIS III criteria diagnosed within less than 12 hours.
  • Written consent or oral by the patient (and/or consent signed by the next of skin)
  • Patient has social security affiliation or who beneficiary of such social security

Exclusion Criteria

  • Patient with life expectancy inferior to 24 hours at the time of inclusion.
  • Cardiac arrest
  • Allergy to albumin
  • Pregnancy
  • Traumatic brain injury
  • Limitation of invasive therapeutics, palliative care
  • Patient under guardianship or curatorship

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Ventilator free days at day 28

Time Frame: 28 days

Delta SOFA score (Day0 - Day5)

Time Frame: Day 5

Delta SOFA score is the difference between SOFA (Sepsis-related Organ Failure Assessment) measured at day 0 and at Day 5. SOFA score was developed to quantify organ dysfunction in patients with sepsis and to determine treatment effectiveness. SOFA score is a scale range from 0 to 24, with higher scores indicating worse organ dysfunction. Five organs dysfunctions are analyzed: * Respiratory: PaO2/FiO2 ratio * Cardio-vascular: severity of hypotension and need of vasopressors (µ/kg/min) * Renal: creatinine (mg/dl) * Hemostasis: Platelet count (G/l) * Liver: Bilirubin (mg/dl) * Neurologic: Glasgow coma scale

ICU length of stay until ability to ICU discharge

Time Frame: 90 days

Length of stay in hospital

Time Frame: 90 days

Renal failure free days at day 28

Time Frame: 28 days

Catecholamine free days at day 10

Time Frame: 10 days

Secondary Outcomes

  • Mortality at day 90(90 days)
  • Mortality at day 28(28 days)

Study Sites (17)

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