Clinical Trial: Use of Extracorporeal Treatment With the Cytosorb-Adsorber for the Reduction of SIRS in Heart Surgery Patients

Study Status: Recruiting
Recruit Status: Recruiting
Study Type: Interventional

Official Title: Case-observation and Compassionate Use: Use of Extracorporeal Treatment With the Cytosorb-Adsorber for the Reduction of Postoperative Hyperinflammation and SIRS After Heart-surgery With the Use of a H

Brief Summary:

Heart-surgery with the use of a heart-lung-machine can trigger the development of a full-blown SIRS (Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrom) with multi organ failure and severe sepsis in the course of disease.

For the treatment of full-blown SIRS extracorporeal treatment like the Cytosorb-Adsorber are in clinical testing. The Cytosorb-Adsorber is a CE-signed medical device with approval for the treatment of severe sepsis and hyperinflammation. The adsorber remove not-specific cytokines and other inflammation mediators from the patients blood.

In this study (as a case-observation and compassionate use) the effect of extracorporeal treatment with the Cytosorb-Adsorber for the reduction of postoperative hyperinflammation and SIRS after heart-surgery with use of a heart-lung-machine will be observed.

The aim of the study is recording the influence of the treatment with the Cytosorb-Adsorber on the course of hyperinflammation and multi organ failure in comparison with a historic control group.


Detailed Summary:

All patients underlying heart surgery with the use of a heart-lung-machine and fullfilling of the inclusion-criteria should be sreened for the study. The study take place on two surgical intensive care units (PIT I and PIT II) of the university hospital Rostock, Germany. The extracorporeal treatment with the Cytosorb-Adsorber will be started 6 hours after end of the operation if written informed consent was obtained from all participants or from the patients` representatives if direct consent could not be received. The extracorporeal treatment duration will be 24 hours and the observation time 90 days.

The aim of the study is recording the influence of the treatment with the Cytosorb-Adsorber on the course of hyperinflammation and multi organ failure in comparison with a historic control group. The main-criterion is a significant difference in the mean-SOFA (Sequential Organ Failure Assessment)-score between the Cytosorb-group and the historic control group after 7 days. Beside criterions are the 30- and 90-day survival, time of respirator-therapy, length of ICU stay, severity of the Critical Illness Polyneuropathy and dosage of vasopressors on the days 1, 2 and 3.

From all patients basic demographic information, illness severity (APACHE II, SOFA scores), microbiological results, pre-morbidity, and clinical outcome for study cohort will recorded. At the days 1-4, 7, 14, 30 and before/after the extracorporeal treatment the patients will screened for clinical and immunological data: hemodynamic, inflammation, coagulation, hemolysis, temperature, organ function blood parameters and cytokines. "Day 1" was defined as the day of the beginning of the extracorporeal treatment. At days 1, 2 and 7 hemodynamic monitoring will done with the PiCCO-System (PULSION Medical Systems, Feldkirchen, Germany). For dynamic measurement
Sponsor: University of Rostock

Current Primary Outcome: mean SOFA [ Time Frame: day 7 ]

A significant difference in the mean-SOFA (Sequential Organ Failure Assessment)-score between the Cytosorb-group and the historic control group after 7 days.


Original Primary Outcome: Same as current

Current Secondary Outcome:

  • 30- and 90-day survival [ Time Frame: day 30, day 90 ]
    Observation time 90 days.
  • time of respirator-therapy [ Time Frame: day 90 ]
    Observation time 90 days.
  • length of ICU stay [ Time Frame: day 90 ]
    Observation time 90 days.
  • dosage of vasopressors on the days 1, 2 and 3. [ Time Frame: day 1, 2 and 3 ]
    Use of Vasopressors are monitored.


Original Secondary Outcome: Same as current

Information By: University of Rostock

Dates:
Date Received: October 9, 2014
Date Started: October 2014
Date Completion: March 2018
Last Updated: April 19, 2017
Last Verified: April 2017