Meglimine Sodium Succinate for Correction of Metabolic Acidosis in Critically Ill Patients
- Conditions
- Metabolic Acidosis
- Interventions
- Drug: PlaceboDrug: Meglumine Sodium Succinate
- Registration Number
- NCT05147051
- Brief Summary
An acid-base imbalance, called metabolic acidosis (acid-base disorder lasting from several minutes to several days, caused by a decrease in serum bicarbonate ion (HCO3) concentration), is often observed in critically ill patients with various underlying diseases. Metabolic acidosis has a negative impact on the cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, nervous, excretory, hematological, endocrine, musculoskeletal and immune systems and is associated with unfavourable outcomes. Reamberin® is a solution of disubstituted sodium salt of succinic acid, which has an alkaline reaction and succinate is capable to integrate into the Krebs cycle and restore energy metabolism in the cell. The aim of the present study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of meglumine sodium succinate at a dose of 500 to 3000 ml in critically ill patients with metabolic acidosis and choose the optimal volume of its solution for the correction of metabolic acidosis in critically ill patients.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 140
- Signed and dated written Informed Consent (if unconscious due to a critical condition, the decision is made by a Council consisting of 3 physicians)
- Male and female patients aged 18-70
- Critical illness ((shock (including traumatic, hypovolemic), major trauma, acute massive blood loss, acute complicated surgical diseases of the abdominal organs) accompanied by metabolic acidosis, defined as serum bicarbonate <22mmol/L
- pH of arterial blood 7.20-7.35, inclusive
- Planned volume of infusion >= 1500 ml per day
- Interval between admission to the ICU and randomization <24 hours
- Pregnant and lactating women
- Known hypersensitivity to any component of the study drug / placebo
- Chronic kidney disease stage C5 (end-stage renal failure)
- Acute hepatic failure (ALT > 15 upper normal limits) or liver cirrhosis
- Traumatic brain injury accompanied by cerebral edema
- Previously diagnosed mental illness
- Any chronic disease in the terminal stage with a life expectancy of < 3 months
- HIV infection
- Clinically significant cardiovascular disease (unstable angina pectoris or angina pectoris of functional class III or higher; chronic heart failure III - IV class according to NYHA; acute myocardial infarction within 6 months before screening)
- Extremely low or extremely high body fat
- Infusion sodium bicarbonate, sodium bicarbonate, trometamol, Sterofundin, Quintasol, Ringer's lactate (Hartmann's solution) within 6 hours before screening
- Acute respiratory acidosis
- Poisoning with chemical compounds causing metabolic acidosis
- Alcohol in saliva at screening >= 0.5 pro mille
- Previously diagnosed chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Placebo Placebo Patients receive a Placebo (Ringer's solution), 500 ml intravenously every 8 hours (up to 6 infusions). Reamberin group Meglumine Sodium Succinate Patients receive the investigational treatment (meglumine sodium succinate), 500 ml intravenously every 8 hours (up to 6 infusions).
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Elimination of acidosis at 24 hours after the start of treatment 24 hours The proportion of patients who have achieved normalization of the serum bicarbonate level (normalization = serum hydrocarbonate ion concentration ≥22 mmol / Liter), at 24 hours after the start of therapy.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (6)
Ivanovo Regional Clinical Hospital
🇷🇺Ivanovo, Russian Federation
Central Clinical Hospital with a polyclinic of the Office of the President of the Russian Federation
🇷🇺Moscow, Russian Federation
GBUZ Arkhangelsk region "First GKB named after E.E. Volosevich"
🇷🇺Arkhangel'sk, Russian Federation
Privolzhsky District Medical Center
🇷🇺Nizhny Novgorod, Russian Federation
Saint-Petersburg I.I.Dzanelidze Research Institute of Emergency Medicine
🇷🇺Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation
National Research Mordovian State University n.a. N.P. Ogarev
🇷🇺Saransk, Russian Federation