| Literature DB >> 24484547 |
Alpha A Fowler1, Aamer A Syed, Shelley Knowlson, Robin Sculthorpe, Don Farthing, Christine DeWilde, Christine A Farthing, Terri L Larus, Erika Martin, Donald F Brophy, Seema Gupta, Bernard J Fisher, Ramesh Natarajan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Parenterally administered ascorbic acid modulates sepsis-induced inflammation and coagulation in experimental animal models. The objective of this randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase I trial was to determine the safety of intravenously infused ascorbic acid in patients with severe sepsis.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24484547 PMCID: PMC3937164 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5876-12-32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Baseline demographic data of septic patients treated or not treated with intravenous ascorbic acid
| Placebo | 4 male 4 female | 54 – 68 years | 20.4 (15 – 29) | 13.3 ± 2.9 |
| Lo-AscA | 5 male 3 female | 30 – 70 years | 20.4 (12 – 23) | 10.1 ± 2.0 |
| Hi-AscA | 4 male 4 female | 49 – 92 years | 24.0 (12 – 33) | 10.8 ± 4.4 |
aAPACHE Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation, mean (range).
bSOFA Sequential Organ Failure Assessment, mean ± SE.
Clinical data on patients with severe sepsis
| Lung cancer | Pneumonia | Blood: E.coli, Strep bovis | no | yes |
| Resp: E.coli | ||||
| Prodrome with nausea and vomiting for 7 days | Pneumonia | Blood: culture negative | no | yes |
| Urine: Legionella antigen positive | ||||
| ETOH cirrhosis | Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis | Blood: culture negative | no | yes |
| Status/Post gastric bypass | Urinary tract infection | Blood: E. Coli | no | yes |
| Obstructive nephrolithiasis pyelonephritis | Urinary tract infection | Blood: E.Coli | no | yes |
| Urine: E.Coli | ||||
| End stage renal disease | Catheter sepsis | Blood: MRSA | yes (prior to admission) | yes |
| Acute myelogenous leukemia (relapse) | Portacath sepsis | Blood: MRSA | no | yes |
| Urine: Enterobacter | ||||
| Influenza | Pneumonia with coexistent Influenza A | Blood: Strep pneumonia | no | yes |
| Resp: Influenza A | ||||
| Diabetes mellitus | Infected diabetic foot ulcer | Blood: Staph aureus | no | yes |
| Chronic kidney disease | Body Fluid: Staph aureus | |||
| Gout | Resp: MRSA | |||
| Head and neck cancer | Pneumonia | Blood: culture negative | no | yes |
| Resp: culture negative | ||||
| Diabetes mellitus | Pneumonia and colitis | Blood: culture negative | yes (dialysis required) | yes |
| Congestive heart failure | ||||
| Gastrointestinal hemorrhage | ||||
| Resp: MRSA | ||||
| Cellulitis | Pneumonia | Blood: Group a strep. | no | no |
| Hypercholesterolemia | Urinary tract infection | |||
| Multiple myeloma | PneumoniaUrinary tract infection | Blood: Gram positive cocci | no | yes |
| Urine: Proteus mirabilis | ||||
| Non-Hodgkins lymphoma | Pancreatitis | Resp: Aspergillus fumigatus | no | yes |
| Bone marrow transplant | Intra-abdominal sepsis | Blood: Gram negative rods, Gram positive cocci | no | yes |
| Bowel perforation | ||||
| Post allogeneic bone marrow transplant | Pneumonia | Blood: culture negative | no | yes |
| Chronic opiate use | Aspiration pneumonia | Blood: Strep. pneumonia | no | yes |
| Found obtunded | Resp: Strep. pneumonia, Candida glabrata | |||
| Diabetes mellitus | Aspiration pneumonia | Resp: Gram negative rods, gram positive cocci | yes (prior to admission) | yes |
| End stage renal disease | ||||
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | Pneumonia | Blood: culture negative | no | yes |
| Resp: Acinetobacter, Stenotrophomonas maltiphilia | ||||
| Toxic epidermal necrolysis | Skin | Blood: MRSA | yes | yes |
| Acute renal failure | ||||
| Alcoholic cirrhosis | Subacute bacterial peritonitis | Blood: culture negative | no | no |
| Hepatorenal syndrome | ||||
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | Pneumonia | Blood: Gram positive rods | no | yes |
| Severe ankylosing spondylitis | Urinary tract infection | Blood: Klebsiella pneumonia | no | yes |
| Urine: Klebsiella pneumonia | ||||
| Severe aortic stenosis | ||||
| Hepatitis C cirrhosis | Health care acquired pneumonia | Blood: culture negative | yes (dialysis required) | yes |
| Urine: Enterococcus | ||||
| Esophageal varicies | ||||
| Systemic mastocytosis | Pneumonia | Blood: culture negative | no | yes |
| Congestive heart failure | Resp: Budding yeast with pseudohyphae |
Figure 1Plasma ascorbic acid levels following intravenous infusion of ascorbic acid. Plasma ascorbic acid levels were subnormal at entry (<50 μM, dotted line). Ascorbic acid levels rose rapidly in the two treatment groups and were significantly higher than placebo within twelve hours (Lo-AscA vs. placebo p < 0.005, Hi-AscA vs. placebo p < 0.0005) remaining consistently elevated for 96 hours. Ascorbic acid levels in the Hi-AscA group were significantly higher than the Lo-AscA group from the 12 hour point forward. These data show that an intermittent ascorbic acid infusion protocol (every 6 hours) produces sustained steady state levels in patients with severe sepsis. Placebo (О), Lo-AscA (▼), Hi-AscA (▲).
Figure 2Effect of ascorbic acid infusion on Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score (days 0–4). Daily mean SOFA scores decreased over time with both doses of ascorbic acid infusion (p < 0.05 significantly non-zero) with the higher dose significantly less than placebo (Hi-AscA vs. placebo p < 0.01). Placebo (О), Lo-AscA (▼), Hi-AscA (▲).
Figure 3Serum C-reactive protein (CRP) and procalcitonin levels in septic placebo controls and ascorbic acid infused patients. (A) Both the Lo-AscA and the Hi-AscA dosages produced rapid reductions in serum CRP levels, becoming significantly lower than placebo (*p < 0.05 vs placebo) as early as 24 hours. Ascorbic acid infusion reduced CRP levels in both groups throughout the 4 study days (#p < 0.05 vs 0 hr). CRP levels in placebo patients slowly fell over the course of the 4 day study period. (B) Patients in the Lo-AscA and Hi-AscA groups exhibited reduced serum PCT levels beginning at 12 hours. Patients in the Hi-VitC group exhibited further significant reduction in serum PCT between 36 to 48 hours (#p < 0.05 vs 0 hr). Placebo patients exhibited a trend towards increased PCT levels which declined starting at 72 hours post onset of sepsis. Placebo (О), Lo-AscA (▼), Hi-AscA (▲).
Figure 4Plasma thrombomodulin (TM) levels measured in septic placebo controls and ascorbic acid infused patients. Plasma TM levels measured in the ascorbic acid infused patients exhibited no rise throughout the 4 days of study. Patients in the placebo group showed a trend towards increased plasma TM levels beginning at 36 hours, though it did not achieve statistical significance. Placebo (О), Lo-AscA (▼), Hi-AscA (▲).