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Clinical Trials/NCT01775956
NCT01775956
Unknown
N/A

A Retrospective Review of a Comprehensive Cohort of Septic Shock: Assessment of Critical Determinants of Outcome

University of Manitoba1 site in 1 country10,000 target enrollmentDecember 2003
ConditionsSeptic Shock

Overview

Phase
N/A
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Septic Shock
Sponsor
University of Manitoba
Enrollment
10000
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Outcome as determined by treatment choices
Last Updated
12 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Septic shock remains the dominant cause of death in ICU's of the developed world with approximately 400,000 cases annually in the US and another 20,000 annually in Canada. While many retrospective and prospective reviews of septic shock patients have been undertaken worldwide, many key questions remain unanswered. These questions include the true incidence, associated morbidity and mortality of septic shock in North America, key factors associated with successful management and markers suggesting a high probability of a complicated clinical course. Part of the reason for the persistence of these questions, is the fact that previous and ongoing reviews of septic shock and severe sepsis have been either limited in number (typically <150) or biased by the need to be eligible for specific clinical trials (typically, non-eligible patients have not been followed and had data collected.

We propose to examine specific questions within a temporally comprehensive cohort of septic shock patients by review of individual charts using a defined data-extraction template.

Detailed Description

Objectives * Determination of impact of rapidity of implementation of antibiotic therapy, source control (where required) and fluid resuscitation on mortality of septic shock * Utility of persistence or increase of vasopressor needs over the 1st 24 hours of shock as a predictor of a complicated ICU course (ICU duration \> 1 week) or death * Assessment of initial biochemical parameters, co-morbidities and new onset organ failure at admission as predictors of a complicated ICU course (ICU duration \> 1 week) and death Data Collection: Data collection would be performed by a combination of study nurses and 2nd or 3rd year medical students hired for the summer for this research project. Research nurses and student will be trained by the principal investigator. A minimum of 10% of the charts will be randomly audited by the principal investigator to ensure appropriate data extraction. This will allow the PI to review and correct any discrepant coding issues and judge specific questions (e.g. appropriateness of antibiotics/presence of effective antibiotics or not). Data Collection Tool: Attached. In addition, data in the ICU registry includes basic epidemiologic data (age, sex, all pertinent medical/surgical comorbidities/risk factors, etc) as well as all Apache II

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
December 2003
End Date
July 2018
Last Updated
12 years ago
Study Type
Observational
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Dr. Anand Kumar

MD

University of Manitoba

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

  • Not provided

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Outcome as determined by treatment choices

Time Frame: Participants will be followed for the Average length of hospital stay 4-5 weeks

Analysis will be used to examine critical therapeutic elements of outcome (choice of antibiotics, rapidity of initiation, use of multiple drug combinations, choice and speed of initiation of pressors, choice and degree of fluid resuscitation, etc). Preliminary analysis of data from 2800 charts suggests an annual incidence of incidence of septic shock in North America (without adjustment for age, sex or socioeconomic status) of approximately 175,000 annual cases, a lower number than has been suggested in some other studies. Further preliminary analysis suggests there is a critical relationship between rapidity of antibiotic initiation and source control implementation following onset of hypotension and outcome in septic shock (Kumar et al, CCM 2006).

Secondary Outcomes

  • Vasopressor use as a predictor of complications(Participants will be followed for the Average length of hospital stay 4-5 weeks)
  • Elements that predict complications in ICU(Participants will be followed for the Average length of hospital stay 4-5 weeks)

Study Sites (1)

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