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Clinical Efficacy

$1,003,370P50FY2007GMNIH

University Of Pittsburgh At Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh PA

Investigators

Linked publications & trials

Abstract

The primary objectives of this subproject are to test the sequential hypotheses:[unreadable] 1): Protocolized resuscitation is superior to usual care (mean mortality of arms A&B combined <[unreadable] mortality of arm C).[unreadable] 2): The Rivers protocol is superior to the McKendry-Singer protocol (mortality of arm A < mortality of[unreadable] arm B).[unreadable] We propose a prospective, randomized, three-arm parallel-group trial of alternative resuscitation strategies for[unreadable] early septic shock. The three arms are: A. the Rivers protocol; B. the McKendry-Singer protocol; and C. usual[unreadable] care. The primary hypotheses to be tested sequentially are that: protocolized resuscitation results in lower[unreadable] hospital mortality than usual care (arms A & B vs. arm C) and that resuscitation targeted to achieve a normal[unreadable] ScvO2 (Rivers protocol) results in lower hospital mortality than fluid resuscitation and blood pressure control[unreadable] alone (McKendry-Singer protocol) (arm A vs. arm B). These hypotheses will be tested on all enrolled subjects[unreadable] following an intent-to-treat analysis. The study will enroll 1950 subjects at 19 hospitals distributed[unreadable] geographically throughout the US with coordination by the University of Pittsburgh. The study is powered to find[unreadable] a 20% RRR in mortality for both hypotheses.

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