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Efficacy and Safety of Rapid Intermittent Correction Compared With Slow Continuous Correction in Patients With Severe Hypernatremia

Efficacy and Safety of Rapid Intermittent Correction Compared With Slow Continuous Correction in Patients With Severe Hypernatremia (SALSA II Trial)

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04949139
Acronym
SALSAII
Enrollment
178
Registered
2021-07-02
Start date
2021-05-01
Completion date
2025-02-22
Last updated
2025-08-29

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Hypernatremia

Keywords

Hypernatremia, Treatment, 5% dextrose water

Brief summary

This study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of rapid intermittent correction and slow correction with an electrolyte-free solution in patients with severe hypernatremia (glucose-corrected serum sodium, ≥ 155 mmol/L).

Detailed description

Hypernatremia is defined as serum sodium (sNa) levels above 145 mmol/L and is caused by abnormalities in water balance, mainly in children, elderly, and critically ill patients. It occurs in 3% of hospitalized patients and in 9% of critically ill patients. Hypernatremia indicates hypertonic hyperosmolality and causes water outflow, resulting in cell dehydration. Most of the symptoms and signs of hypernatremia are due to brain abnormalities, which can progress to hyperventilation, muscle weakness, consciousness (lethargy), and coma. The short-term mortality rate of hypernatremia is 50%-60%. Decreased osmotic pressure in the extracellular fluid during correction of hyponatremia can cause cellular edema and permanent brain damage. The recommended sNa correction rate for acute hypernatremia is up to 1 mmol/L/h, whereas that for chronic hypernatremia is less than 0.5 mmol/L/h (approximately 10 mmol/L/day). However, these correction rates have only been studied and proven in pediatric patients. A recent study conducted on adults revealed that rapid correction (more than 0.5 mmol/L/h) was not associated with a higher risk for mortality, seizures, and alteration of consciousness. Several studies reported that excessively slow rates of sNa correction were associated with higher mortality, whereas rapid rates demonstrated lower mortality. There are no established guidelines for the Na correction rate for hypernatremia. The European and American guidelines recommend infusion of electrolyte-free water (10 mL/kg over 1 h or 3 mL/kg/h) for the management of overcorrection of hyponatremia. In the previously published SALSA I trial, 10 mL/kg over 1 h was applied as a method of re-lowering treatment in overly rapid correction of hyponatremia. However, this rapid intermittent bolus of electrolyte-free water has never been applied to treat hypernatremia. The aim of this prospective, randomized, open-labeled, multi-center, and investigator-initiated trial is to determine whether a rapid and intermittent bolus of electrolyte-free water in hypernatremia can increase the incidence of rapid decrease in sNa level and increase the survival time compared to the slow continuous administration method. A total of 166 patients with severe hypernatremia will be enrolled and randomly assigned to receive either intermittent bolus or slow continuous infusion of 5% dextrose water. The participants will be divided into three groups according to age and sex and will receive 5% dextrose water for 2 days at different correction rates. Serum sodium will be measured every 3 h from the beginning to 6 h, followed by every 6 h until 48 h. In addition, urine sodium and potassium levels will be measured at baseline and 24 h. The PP (Per Protocol) analysis will be applied to enrolled participants who is infused with 75-125% of total planned volume of 5% dextrose water.

Interventions

Reducing the sodium concentration

Sponsors

Seoul National University Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Patients who visit the emergency department and in-patients over 18 years * Severe hypernatremia: glucose-corrected serum sodium ≥ 155 mmol/L * Written consent

Exclusion criteria

* Arterial hypotension requiring inotropes or vasopressors (systolic blood pressure \< 90 mmHg and mean arterial pressure \< 70 mmHg) * Anuria or bilateral urinary outlet obstruction * Uncontrolled diabetes mellitus (HbA1C \> 9%) or glucose at baseline \> 500 mg/dL or uncontrolled diabetic ketoacidosis or uncontrolled hyperosmolar hyperglycemic syndrome * Decompensated liver cirrhosis (LC) - Known LC with ascites or diuretic use or hepatic encephalopathy or varix * End-stage renal disease receiving renal replacement therapy * Uncontrolled Heart failure (regardless of LVEF) * Women who are pregnant or breast feeding * Patients with the following conditions within 30 days prior to randomization: 1. History of cardiac surgery excluding PCA, acute myocardial infarction, sustained ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, acute coronary syndrome, and admission for heart failure 2. Uncontrolled increase of intracranial pressure * The subjects judged by investigators to have difficulty continuing the trial were also excluded. * The case the subjects does not consent to the study

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
efficacy : Incidence of rapid change in sNa level within 24 hours defined as followsup to 24 hoursChange in sNa by ≥ 6 mmol/L or Na ≤ 150 mmol/L within 24 hours All subjects will receive 5% dextrose water by rapid intermittent bolus or slow continuous infusion for 48 h, and sNa levels will be measured.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
the 28-day survival rateup to 28 dayssurvival rate
difference in sNa levels 6 hours after the initial testup to 6 hoursGap of sodium level between 6 hours and initial level
volume of 5% dextrose water infused during 48 hoursup to 48 hoursVolume
Incidence of rapid change in sNa level within 48 hours defined as followsup to 48 hoursChange in sNa by ≥ 12 mmol/L or Na ≤ 150 mmol/L within 48 hours

Other

MeasureTime frameDescription
Incidence of cerebral edema documented via brain CT at 48 hours in patients with overcorrectionup to 48 hoursincidence of cerebral edema
Incidence of osmotic demyelinating syndrome confirmed by ICD-10 code or MRIup to 48 hoursincidence of ODS
Target correction rateup to 48 hoursChange in Na by ≥ 6 mmol/L and \< 12 mmol/L from the initial level or Na ≤ 150 mmol/L within 24 hours Change in Na by ≥ 12 mmol/L and \< 24 mmol/L from the initial level or Na ≤ 150 mmol/L within 48 hours
In-hospital mortalityup to 28 daysmortality rate
Incidence of administrated intravenous volume of ≥ 3 L/day, except for fluids administrated according to the protocolup to 48 hoursincidence of adminitrated intravenous volume of ≥ 3 L/day
Glasgow coma scale at pretreatment, 6 hours, 24 hours, and 48 hoursup to 48 hoursGlasgow coma scale can range from 3 (completely unresponsive) to 15 (responsive).
Incidence of undercorrection:up to 48 hourssNa \< 6 mmol/L within 3/6/12/24 hours sNa \< 12 mmol/L within 48 h
Length of hospital stayup to 8 weeksLength of hospital stay
Number of uses of desmopressinup to 48 hoursnumber of uses of demopressin
Incidence of overcorrectionup to 48 hoursNa \> 12 mmol/L within 24 h or \> 24 mmol/L within 48 h at any given period

Countries

South Korea

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026