The purpose of this study, in mechanically ventilated septic shock patients, is to determine whether a fluid loading strategy based on parameters derived from the transpulmonary thermodilution technique may lead to more ventilator free days compared to a fluid loading strategy based on the surviving sepsis guidelines.
Rationale: Fluid loading is an important intervention in patients with severe sepsis and septic shock in order to prevent development of multi organ failure and mortality. The Surviving Sepsis Guidelines recommend during the first 6 hours of resuscitation a central venous pressure (CVP) based fluid loading approach, targeting to 12-15 mmHg in mechanically ventilated patients. CVP however has proven to be a poor indicator for preload and preload dependency, while dynamic parameters as stroke volume variation (SVV) derived from the transpulmonary thermodilution technique (TPTD) are superior. Together with the ability to measure the extravascular lung water (EVLW), the TPTD technique may guide fluid management more accurately and may prevent deleterious fluid overloading. Objective: The risk of fluid overloading in mechanically ventilated patients with septic shock is less when fluid administration is based on a fluid loading protocol using SVV together with EVLW measurements than applying the Surviving Sepsis Guidelines targeting CVP to 12-15 mmHg, in at least the first 6 hours of resuscitation, translating in more ventilator free days (VFDs) Study design: This is a prospective, randomized, non-blinded, single-center, controlled clinical trial comparing two different fluid resuscitation strategies in patients with septic shock. Patients will be randomized for fluid management based on the Surviving Sepsis Guidelines (SSG) or based transpulmonary thermodilution (TPTD) derived SVV and EVLW in at least the first 6 hours of resuscitation. Study population: All patients of ≥18 years admitted to the ICU because of septic shock together with the need for mechanical ventilation are eligible for randomization Intervention: During at least the first 6 hours of resuscitation, the standard group (SSG guided therapy) follows a fluid resuscitation protocol based on the Surviving Sepsis Campaign recommendations. Initial trigger for fluid loading when circulatory insufficiency is present will be the CVP (target ≥12 mmHg). The intervention group (TPTD guided therapy) follows a fluid resuscitation protocol based on SVV and EVLW. Initial trigger for fluid loading when circulatory insufficiency is present will be SVV. The study protocol will be applied up to a maximum of 72 hours. Main study parameters/endpoints: VFDs on day 28. Benefit and risks associated with participation: Since inclusion criteria include a TPTD (5F fiber optic, femoral artery) catheter, the inconvenience as compared to standard treatment is minimal. Current routine hospital policy involves TPTD catheter insertion in most of the patients meeting the inclusion criteria specified above.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
170
Initial trigger for fluid loading when circulatory insufficiency is present will be SVV. If SVV ≤10% in patients on controlled mechanical ventilation with tidal volumes of ≥8 ml/kg, fluid loading will not be performed. If SVV \>10% or spontaneous breathing efforts are present, a fluid challenge should be performed. Also if patients are on controlled mechanical ventilation with tidal volumes of ≤7 ml/kg, a fluid challenge should be performed. If fluid responsiveness is present and SVV decreases to ≤10%, further fluid loading should be stopped. If SVV is still \>10%, the increase in EVLW will decide whether to continue fluid loading or not; if EVLW is ≥12 mL/kg PBW and EVLW increases upon fluid loading, further fluid loading should be stopped.
Initial trigger for fluid loading when circulatory insufficiency is present will be the CVP (target ≥12 mmHg). If circulatory insufficiency is absent, fluid loading will not be initiated or stopped independently of the actual CVP level.
Medisch Spectrum Twente
Enschede, Netherlands
RECRUITINGventilator free days (VFDs)
VFDs from enrolment to extubation until day 28
Time frame: 28 days
duration of circulatory shock (hours)
Duration of circulatory shock, defined as the amount of consecutive hours on vasopressor therapy
Time frame: 72 hours
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