Shock, Septic
Conditions
Keywords
Sepsis, Septic shock, Pediatric, Fluid resuscitation, Saline, Lactated Ringer's, Crystalloid, Mortality, Pragmatic trial, Feasibility
Brief summary
The objective of this pilot study is to assess overall feasibility prior to embarking on a larger randomized pragmatic trial comparing the clinical effectiveness of fluid resuscitation with NS versus LR for pediatric patients with suspected septic shock. Necessary feasibility assessments include ensuring appropriate compliance with study fluid in each of the two arms, effectiveness of study enrollment using a pragmatic study design embedded within routine clinical practice, and acceptability of using Exception from Informed Consent (EFIC).
Detailed description
Approximately 5,000 children die from septic shock each year in the US and thousands more die worldwide. Despite widespread implementation of resuscitation protocols, contemporary studies still report 2-6% mortality for children with septic shock treated in the pediatric emergency department (ED). In the investigators' recent survey of the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN), 45% of physicians had treated a child for septic shock in the ED who subsequently died in the hospital in the past two years. Fluid resuscitation is the cornerstone of resuscitation for hypovolemia and shock, and intravenous fluids are among the most commonly used therapies worldwide. Yet, there remains uncertainty as to the most appropriate fluid type to restore effective blood volume and optimize organ perfusion. In the absence of a clear role for the early use colloids, administration of crystalloid fluids is generally preferred (except in cases of hemorrhage). For septic shock, in particular, crystalloid fluids have long been the standard resuscitative fluid. Crystalloid fluids can be categorized as non-buffered (most commonly 0.9% normal saline \[NS\]) or buffered/balanced (in the US, this is most commonly lactated Ringer's \[LR\]) solutions. NS and LR are inexpensive, stable at room temperature, and nearly universally available with identical storage volumes and dosing strategies. Notably, both are also of proven clinical benefit in septic shock and have extensive clinical experience for use in fluid resuscitation of critically ill patients. However, while NS is currently used in 80-95% of cases of septic shock, an increasing body of data now suggest that LR resuscitation may have superior efficacy and safety. Buffered crystalloids, including LR, have demonstrated a 1-4% absolute mortality reduction and up to a 50% lower odds of dialysis compared to NS in observational and non-randomized interventional studies in adult sepsis. Nevertheless, because definitive conclusions have not been able to be drawn from existing observational and non-randomized studies, NS overwhelmingly remains the most commonly used fluid based on historical precedent while controversy remains. To definitively test the comparative effectiveness of NS and LR, a well-powered randomized controlled trial (RCT) is necessary. A large pragmatic randomized trial embedded within everyday clinical practice provides a cost-efficient and generalizable approach to inform clinicians about best comparative effectiveness of common therapies. Unlike explanatory RCTs, pragmatic trials need heterogeneity in patients, non-study therapies, and settings. To accomplish this, these trials must be large enough to detect small effects and simple enough to incorporate into routine clinical practice. The characteristics of LR and NS provide the ideal scenario for a large pragmatic trial.18 An ED-based trial is necessary to enroll patients at initiation of resuscitation. While any benefit is expected to be small, even a 1-2% absolute reduction in mortality that is in line with prior adult studies would be a clinically important difference by saving the lives of 50-100 children in the US (and many more worldwide) each year. This overall public health impact is commensurate with changing from NS to LR because such a practice change is a simple, cost-neutral shift from largely using NS to largely using LR. However, before embarking on a large, pragmatic randomized trial that will determine the comparative effectiveness and safety of NS and LR, several concerns regarding feasibility of such a trial need to be addressed including a) ensuring adequate compliance with study fluid administration within each randomized arm using the proposed pragmatic study design, b) determining that a sufficient proportion of patients can be enrolled using the proposed pragmatic study design that will be embedded within routine clinical practice rather than use of a dedicated study team, and c) demonstrating that the study can feasibly be performed using EFIC when enrolling critically ill infants, children, and adolescents into this clinical trial. Demonstrating these feasibility criteria at a single site will strongly support success in a larger, multicenter study that will enroll several thousand patients across the 18 sites comprising Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) to test morbidity and mortality outcomes.
Interventions
LR is a sterile, nonpyrogenic balanced solution used for fluid and electrolyte replenishment via intravenous or intraosseous administration. Each 100 mL of LR contains 600 mg sodium chloride (NaCl), 310 mg of sodium lactate (C3H5NaO3), 30 mg of potassium chloride (KCl), and 20 mg of calcium chloride (CaCl2 · 2H20) with an approximate potential of hydrogen (pH) of 6.5 (6.0 to 7.5).
Normal saline solution is an unbalanced crystalloid solution containing 154 mEq/L of sodium and 154 milliequivalent (mEq/L) of chloride.
Sponsors
Study design
Masking description
Study participants, care provider, investigator, and outcomes assessor will not be masked to intervention allocation.
Intervention model description
Single-center, open-label, randomized pragmatic clinical trial
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
1. Males or females age \>6 months to \<18 years 2. Clinician concern for septic shock, operationalized as: 1. a positive ED sepsis alert confirmed at the physician-led sepsis huddle OR 2. a physician diagnosis of suspected septic shock requiring parenteral antibiotics and fluid resuscitation as per the ED sepsis management pathway 3. administration of at least 20 mL/kg IV/ intraosseous (IO) fluid resuscitation 4. Receipt of ≤40 mL/kg IV/IO crystalloid fluid prior to randomization 5. Additional fluid deemed likely to be necessary to treat poor perfusion, defined as either hypotension or abnormal (either flash or \>2 second) capillary refill (as determined by clinician's judgment)10 6. Parental/guardian permission (informed consent) if time permits; otherwise, EFIC criteria met
Exclusion criteria
1. Clinician judgement that patient's condition deems it unsafe to administer either NS or LR (since patients will be equally likely to receive NS or LR at time of study enrollment), including (but not limited to): 1. Clinical suspicion for impending brain herniation based on data available at or before patient meets criteria for study enrollment 2. Known hyperkalemia, defined as non-hemolyzed whole blood or plasma/serum potassium \> 6 mEq/L, based on data available at or before patient meets criteria for study enrollment 3. Known hypercalcemia, defined as plasma/serum total calcium \>12 mg/dL or whole blood ionized calcium \> 1.35 mmol/L, based on data available at or before patient meets criteria for study enrollment 4. Known acute fulminant hepatic failure, defined as plasma/serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) \>10,000 U/L or total bilirubin \>12.0 mg/dL, based on data available at or before patient meets criteria for study enrollment 5. Known history of severe hepatic impairment, defined as diagnosis of cirrhosis, liver failure, or active listing for liver transplant 6. Known history of severe renal impairment, defined as current dependency on peritoneal dialysis or hemodialysis 7. Known metabolic disorder, inborn error of metabolism, or primary mineralcorticoid deficiency (e.g., mitochondrial disorder, urea cycle disorder, amino acidemia, fatty acid oxidation disorder, glycogen storage disorder, congenital adrenal hypoplasia, Addison's disease) as reported by subject, LAR or accompanying caregiver, or as listed in the medical record 2. Known pregnancy determined by routine clinical history disclosed by patient and/or legally authorized representative (LAR) (or other accompanying acquaintance) 3. Known prisoner as determined by routine social history disclosed by patient and/or LAR (or other accompanying acquaintance) 4. Known allergy to either normal saline or lactated Ringer's as determined by routine allergy history disclosed by patient and/or LAR (or other accompanying acquaintance) or as indicated in the medical record 5. Indication of prior declined consent to participate based on presence of PRoMPT BOLUS Opt-Out bracelet
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Compliance With Study Fluid Administration in the Assigned Study Arm | up 48 hours after randomization | Proportion of total crystalloids administered as saline in each arm during the intervention phase |
Secondary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Enrollment of Eligible Patients | up to 6 months | Proportion of eligible patients treated in the pediatric ED who are enrolled, randomized, and treated with study fluid |
| Acceptability of Enrollment Using Exception From Informed Consent | up to 6 months | Proportion of eligible patients who meet criteria for EFIC who are enrolled, randomized, and treated with study fluid and do not withdraw prior to completion of the follow-up phase |
Other
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Hospital Length of Stay | up to 90 days following randomization | Measured as the number of calendar days between ED arrival and ED or hospital discharge (whichever occurs later) |
| Mortality | up to 90 days following randomization | Proportion of enrolled patients who do not survive |
| Adverse Events | up to four days post-randomization | Hyperlactatemia, hyperkalemia, hypercalcemia, hypernatremia, hyponatremia, hyperchloremia, therapy for brain herniation |
| Hospital-free Days | up to 28 days following randomization | The number of calendar days alive and out of the hospital between randomization (day 0) and day 27 with death prior hospital discharge defined as zero hospital-free days |
| New Inpatient Dialysis | Up to 90 days following randomization | Proportion treated with any replacement therapy that was not a continuation of pre-hospital chronic therapy |
Countries
United States
Participant flow
Participants by arm
| Arm | Count |
|---|---|
| Lactated Ringer's Fluid (LR) Lactated Ringer's (LR) fluid will be administered to patients randomized to the experimental arm. LR will be used for all fluid boluses and maintenance fluids (supplemental electrolytes are allowed) from time immediately after randomization through 11:59 pm of the next calender day. The determination of when to give fluid, how much fluid to give, how fast to give fluid, and what access to use to administer fluid will remain at the discretion of the treating team.
Lactated Ringer: LR is a sterile, nonpyrogenic balanced solution used for fluid and electrolyte replenishment via intravenous or intraosseous administration. Each 100 mL of LR contains 600 mg sodium chloride (NaCl), 310 mg of sodium lactate (C3H5NaO3), 30 mg of potassium chloride (KCl), and 20 mg of calcium chloride (CaCl2 · 2H20) with an approximate potential of hydrogen (pH) of 6.5 (6.0 to 7.5). | 24 |
| 0.9% Normal Saline Fluid (NS) 0.9% normal saline (NS) fluid will be administered to patients randomized to the active comparator (control) arm. NS will be used for all fluid boluses and maintenance fluids (supplemental electrolytes are allowed) from time immediately after randomization through 11:59 pm of the next calender day. The determination of when to give fluid, how much fluid to give, how fast to give fluid, and what access to use to administer fluid will remain at the discretion of the treating team.
Normal saline: Normal saline solution is an unbalanced crystalloid solution containing 154 mEq/L of sodium and 154 milliequivalent (mEq/L) of chloride. | 26 |
| Total | 50 |
Baseline characteristics
| Characteristic | 0.9% Normal Saline Fluid (NS) | Lactated Ringer's Fluid (LR) | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, Categorical <=18 years | 26 Participants | 24 Participants | 50 Participants |
| Age, Categorical >=65 years | 0 Participants | 0 Participants | 0 Participants |
| Age, Categorical Between 18 and 65 years | 0 Participants | 0 Participants | 0 Participants |
| Age, Continuous | 9.7 years | 3.8 years | 5.8 years |
| Comorbid Conditions Any comorbid condition | 16 participants | 16 participants | 32 participants |
| Comorbid Conditions Bone marrow or solid organ transplant | 2 participants | 3 participants | 5 participants |
| Comorbid Conditions Cancer | 5 participants | 4 participants | 9 participants |
| Comorbid Conditions Chronic ventilator dependence | 5 participants | 6 participants | 11 participants |
| Comorbid Conditions Indwelling central venous catheter | 4 participants | 6 participants | 10 participants |
| Comorbid Conditions Kidney disease | 1 participants | 2 participants | 3 participants |
| Comorbid Conditions Neurologic dysfunction | 5 participants | 7 participants | 12 participants |
| Comorbid Conditions Sickle cell disease | 2 participants | 0 participants | 2 participants |
| Race/Ethnicity, Customized Race/Ethnicity Asian | 1 Participants | 0 Participants | 1 Participants |
| Race/Ethnicity, Customized Race/Ethnicity Hispanic | 9 Participants | 10 Participants | 19 Participants |
| Race/Ethnicity, Customized Race/Ethnicity Non-Hispanic Black | 4 Participants | 3 Participants | 7 Participants |
| Race/Ethnicity, Customized Race/Ethnicity Non-Hispanic White | 11 Participants | 11 Participants | 22 Participants |
| Race/Ethnicity, Customized Race/Ethnicity Unknown/Not Reported | 1 Participants | 0 Participants | 1 Participants |
| Region of Enrollment United States | 26 participants | 24 participants | 50 participants |
| Sex: Female, Male Female | 12 Participants | 11 Participants | 23 Participants |
| Sex: Female, Male Male | 14 Participants | 13 Participants | 27 Participants |
| Site of Infection Abdominal infection | 0 participants | 1 participants | 1 participants |
| Site of Infection Alternative diagnosis other than infection | 1 participants | 1 participants | 2 participants |
| Site of Infection Bacteremia | 4 participants | 2 participants | 6 participants |
| Site of Infection CNS infection | 3 participants | 2 participants | 5 participants |
| Site of Infection Other | 6 participants | 6 participants | 12 participants |
| Site of Infection Pneumonia/lung infection | 5 participants | 5 participants | 10 participants |
| Site of Infection Skin/soft tissue infection | 3 participants | 2 participants | 5 participants |
| Site of Infection Unknown | 4 participants | 3 participants | 7 participants |
| Site of Infection Urinary Tract Infection | 3 participants | 4 participants | 7 participants |
Adverse events
| Event type | EG000 affected / at risk | EG001 affected / at risk |
|---|---|---|
| deaths Total, all-cause mortality | 0 / 24 | 1 / 26 |
| other Total, other adverse events | 11 / 24 | 12 / 26 |
| serious Total, serious adverse events | 4 / 24 | 2 / 26 |
Outcome results
Compliance With Study Fluid Administration in the Assigned Study Arm
Proportion of total crystalloids administered as saline in each arm during the intervention phase
Time frame: up 48 hours after randomization
| Arm | Measure | Value (MEDIAN) |
|---|---|---|
| Lactated Ringer's Fluid (LR) | Compliance With Study Fluid Administration in the Assigned Study Arm | 0 Proportion of total crystalloids adminis |
| 0.9% Normal Saline Fluid (NS) | Compliance With Study Fluid Administration in the Assigned Study Arm | 100 Proportion of total crystalloids adminis |
Acceptability of Enrollment Using Exception From Informed Consent
Proportion of eligible patients who meet criteria for EFIC who are enrolled, randomized, and treated with study fluid and do not withdraw prior to completion of the follow-up phase
Time frame: up to 6 months
| Arm | Measure | Value (COUNT_OF_PARTICIPANTS) |
|---|---|---|
| Lactated Ringer's Fluid (LR) | Acceptability of Enrollment Using Exception From Informed Consent | 43 Participants |
Enrollment of Eligible Patients
Proportion of eligible patients treated in the pediatric ED who are enrolled, randomized, and treated with study fluid
Time frame: up to 6 months
| Arm | Measure | Value (COUNT_OF_PARTICIPANTS) |
|---|---|---|
| Lactated Ringer's Fluid (LR) | Enrollment of Eligible Patients | 50 Participants |
Adverse Events
Venous thromboembolism
Time frame: up to seven days post-randomization
| Arm | Measure | Value (COUNT_OF_PARTICIPANTS) |
|---|---|---|
| Lactated Ringer's Fluid (LR) | Adverse Events | 0 Participants |
| 0.9% Normal Saline Fluid (NS) | Adverse Events | 0 Participants |
Adverse Events
Hyperlactatemia, hyperkalemia, hypercalcemia, hypernatremia, hyponatremia, hyperchloremia, therapy for brain herniation
Time frame: up to four days post-randomization
| Arm | Measure | Value (NUMBER) |
|---|---|---|
| Lactated Ringer's Fluid (LR) | Adverse Events | 7 adverse events |
| 0.9% Normal Saline Fluid (NS) | Adverse Events | 18 adverse events |
Hospital-free Days
The number of calendar days alive and out of the hospital between randomization (day 0) and day 27 with death prior hospital discharge defined as zero hospital-free days
Time frame: up to 28 days following randomization
| Arm | Measure | Value (MEDIAN) |
|---|---|---|
| Lactated Ringer's Fluid (LR) | Hospital-free Days | 23 days alive and free of hospitalization |
| 0.9% Normal Saline Fluid (NS) | Hospital-free Days | 25 days alive and free of hospitalization |
Hospital Length of Stay
Measured as the number of calendar days between ED arrival and ED or hospital discharge (whichever occurs later)
Time frame: up to 90 days following randomization
| Arm | Measure | Value (MEDIAN) |
|---|---|---|
| Lactated Ringer's Fluid (LR) | Hospital Length of Stay | 5 days |
| 0.9% Normal Saline Fluid (NS) | Hospital Length of Stay | 3 days |
Mortality
Proportion of enrolled patients who do not survive
Time frame: up to 90 days following randomization
| Arm | Measure | Value (COUNT_OF_PARTICIPANTS) |
|---|---|---|
| Lactated Ringer's Fluid (LR) | Mortality | 0 Participants |
| 0.9% Normal Saline Fluid (NS) | Mortality | 1 Participants |
New Inpatient Dialysis
Proportion treated with any replacement therapy that was not a continuation of pre-hospital chronic therapy
Time frame: Up to 90 days following randomization
| Arm | Measure | Value (COUNT_OF_PARTICIPANTS) |
|---|---|---|
| Lactated Ringer's Fluid (LR) | New Inpatient Dialysis | 0 Participants |
| 0.9% Normal Saline Fluid (NS) | New Inpatient Dialysis | 0 Participants |