Literature DB >> 27484695

Targeted tissue perfusion versus macrocirculation-guided standard care in patients with septic shock (TARTARE-2S): study protocol and statistical analysis plan for a randomized controlled trial.

Ville Pettilä1,2, Tobias Merz3, Erika Wilkman4, Anders Perner5,6, Sari Karlsson7, Theis Lange6,8, Johanna Hästbacka4, Peter Buhl Hjortrup5, Anne Kuitunen7, Stephan M Jakob3, Jukka Takala3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Septic shock has a 90-day mortality risk of up to 50 %. The hemodynamic targets, including mean arterial pressure (MAP) are not based on robust clinical data. Both severe hypotension and high doses of vasopressors may be harmful. Hence, re-evaluation of hemodynamic targets in septic shock is relevant. METHODS/
DESIGN: The targeted tissue perfusion versus macrocirculation-guided standard care in patients with septic shock (TARTARE-2S) trial is a prospective, two-parallel-group, randomized, open-label, multicenter trial with assessor-blinded outcome evaluation. We will randomize at least 200 patients with septic shock in four European intensive care units (ICUs) to test whether a tissue perfusion-guided treatment strategy based on capillary refill time, peripheral temperature, arterial lactate concentrations, and accepting lower MAP levels, leads to a faster resolution of shock than macrocirculation target-guided standard care. The primary outcome measure is days alive in 30 days with normal arterial blood lactate (first value of <2 mmol/L) and without any inotropic or vasopressor agent. Secondary outcomes include individual components of the primary outcome, days alive without renal replacement, days alive without mechanical ventilation in 30 days, and new acute kidney injury. The sample size enables detection of a 13.5-h difference in the primary outcome with a type 1 error of 5 % and power of 80 %, assuming 25 % mortality and a mean of 650 h (SD 30) among the 30-day survivors. After 150 included patients the statistician masked for allocation group will recalculate the sample size potentially increasing the sample up to 300. The Data Safety and Monitoring Board (DSMB) will review the safety data after 100 patients. DISCUSSION: The TARTARE-2S trial will provide important clinical data on treatment targets in septic shock, evaluating the impact of clinical tissue perfusion-guided hemodynamic treatment on a surrogate outcome combining resolution of shock (hyperlactatemia and vasopressors/inotropes), and 30-day mortality. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02579525 . Registered on 19 October 2015.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Critical illness; Lactate; Mortality; Septic shock; Tissue perfusion; Vasopressor

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27484695      PMCID: PMC4971711          DOI: 10.1186/s13063-016-1515-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Trials        ISSN: 1745-6215            Impact factor:   2.279


Background

Septic shock affects millions of people annually and has a 90-day mortality rate of 18 to 50 % [1-5] depending on the patient population and study selection criteria. Early hemodynamic resuscitation and stabilization is considered to be crucial for improved survival. Current resuscitation strategies aim to achieve hemodynamic stabilization as early as possible in order to prevent subsequent organ dysfunction. The guidelines for initial hemodynamic resuscitation of septic shock use primarily macrocirculatory targets, such as mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) and central venous pressure (CVP), and surrogate markers of tissue perfusion such as diuresis. Attempts to use central venous or mixed venous oxygen saturation (ScVO2, SvO2) to guide resuscitation have been disappointing. Despite early enthusiasm based on a small single-center trial which suggested a major improvement in survival [6], no benefit of ScVO2-guided treatment was found in three large multicenter trials [1, 4, 5]. The current SSC guidelines (Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International Guidelines for Management of Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock: 2012) [7] still emphasize a MAP target and to a lesser extent tissue perfusion. Systemic blood pressure and flow and microcirculatory blood flow do not correlate well in septic shock. This is especially true if systemic blood pressure is achieved with vasoconstrictive drugs which per se may impair microcirculation and clinical outcome [8]. Furthermore, a recent systematic review [9] underscored the paucity of clinical evidence to guide the use of vasopressors and to support the current recommendations regarding MAP target levels. In summary, the current resuscitation guidelines for septic shock might direct physicians to use higher doses of vasopressors and inotropes and, thus, facilitate iatrogenic aggravation of shock-induced tissue hypoperfusion. Impaired tissue perfusion and microcirculation are considered to be hallmarks of septic shock, and increased arterial blood lactate in septic shock is a marker of poor prognosis. These concepts provide a rationale for therapeutic strategies focusing more on improvement of tissue perfusion than systemic hemodynamics. Normalization of elevated blood lactate levels has been proposed to guide resuscitation in septic shock because it may reflect tissue perfusion during shock resuscitation better than strategies based mainly on macrohemodynamic targets. The duration of elevated lactate levels is a clinically relevant surrogate endpoint previously related to robust patient-related adverse outcomes, such as multiple organ dysfunction [10] and mortality [11, 12]. In addition, lactate is also associated with peripheral perfusion [13], and has been used as a target in a previous large study in septic shock in comparison to ScVO2-targeted therapy [14]. Abnormal peripheral perfusion, defined as arm-to-fingertip temperature gradient of >4 °C, and capillary refill time (CRT) >4.5 s), is associated with multiple organ dysfunction in critically ill patients [15] and with impaired tissue oxygen saturation and poor outcome in septic shock patients [16]. Of note, subjectively assessed warmness of the peripheral skin has good agreement with the measured temperature differences [15]. The mottling score [17], reflecting perfusion of the knee skin area, has also been used. Additionally, biomarkers (to be explored in sub-studies) indicating endothelial or cardiac damage could elucidate the potential mechanisms leading to untoward clinical patient-related outcomes, such as septic acute kidney injury (AKI) [18] treated with renal replacement therapy (RRT) [19], multiple organ dysfunction, and death.

Aim

The objective is to compare the feasibility and the effect of resolution of shock of two approaches to the management of tissue hypoperfusion in septic shock: (1) targeted tissue perfusion (TTP) approach versus (2) macrocirculation-guided (MCG) care – the latter reflecting recommended standard care.

Methods/design

This trial is a prospective, investigator-initiated, multicenter, two-parallel-group, randomized, open-label, multicenter trial of TTP versus MCG care in patients with septic shock (Appendix 1) with adequate generation of allocation sequence, and adequate allocation concealment. Patients will be stratified by center and by the presence/absence of chronic hypertension. Each participating unit will go through an educational program regarding study monitoring methods (including CRT), and study reporting methods (including repeated hemodynamic target assessments and treatment attempts). The recruitment begins after approval from local ethics committees.

Ethics committee approvals submission/approval

Bern University Hospital Ethics Committee (Kantonal Ethiko Kommittee (KEK) Bern) 19 October 2015/22 March 2016. Helsinki University Hospital Operative Ethics Committee – 23 October 2015/16 December 2015. Rigshospitalet Ethics Committee – April 2016/pending.

Hypothesis

We hypothesize that targeting clinical tissue perfusion (the TTP arm) will decrease the use and untoward effects of vasopressors, and result in more days alive in 30 days with normal arterial blood lactate (first value of <2 mmol/L) and without any inotropic or vasopressor agent – compared to standard clinical care with preference of macrocirculatory targets (the MCG arm).

Trial interventions

All patients will be treated according to the targets (Appendix 2) of the allocated arm: Intervention group – targeted tissue perfusion (TTP) care Control group – macrocirculatory targets-guided (MCG) standard care All interventions in both groups will be given at the discretion of the treating clinicians according to the targets. Both the hemodynamic problems detected and the given interventions will be registered at each change of treatment over time (Appendices 3 and 4).

Concomitant interventions

Treatment of septic shock is complex with multiple interventions [6] and, as blinding of treating personnel is not feasible, the use of several concomitant interventions may be influenced by the allocated intervention arm. In order to minimize these potential differences, treatment suggestions for the following interventions will be provided: Vasopressors – norepinephrine highly recommended (the hemodynamic problems to be registered and reported – Appendix 3) Fluids – correction of hypovolemia (preferably crystalloids, starch not to be used) will be at the discretion of the treating clinician (Appendix 3) Avoidance of excess fluids after 6 h from randomization (amount of given fluids and balance over time up to 72 h will be registered and reported) Inotropic agents – to increase impaired flow, dobutamine is preferred – if ineffective, adrenaline may be used Glucocorticoids – recommended not to be used Blood products – red blood cell (RBC) transfusion trigger 70 g/L, unless ischemia or active bleeding [2] Renal replacement therapy (RRT) – suggested criteria according to conventional standard criteria [19, 20], with proven feasibility [21] as follows: serum potassium ≥6.0 mmol/L, or pH <7.20 and serum bicarbonate ≤10 mmol/L, or evidence of severe respiratory failure, based on a PaO2/FiO2 < 200 and clinical perception of volume overload and oliguria, or persistent severe AKI (serum creatinine remains >50 % the value recorded at randomization) for more than 72 h from randomization Lung-protective ventilation – positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) ≥5 cmH2O, tidal volume <8 ml/ideal body weight, and plateau pressure <30 cmH2O

Inclusion criteria

Septic shock defined as (Appendix 1): Infection (suspected or documented) and Systemic mean blood pressure above 65 mmHg requiring any dose of vasopressors (norepinephrine, epinephrine, vasopressin) despite adequate fluid resuscitation (minimum of 20 ml/kg (actual body weight) crystalloids) and Elevated lactate ≥3.0 mmol/L with suspected hypoperfusion

Exclusion criteria

Age below 18 or over 80 years Any other probable condition than sepsis affecting or expected to affect the central nervous system, including post cardiac arrest Myocardial ischemia Acute pulmonary embolism Terminal illness and not considered for full intensive care support Use of extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) Known liver diseaseChild-Pugh classes B or C Known chronic kidney disease Known to be pregnant or lactating More than 4 h from fulfilled inclusion criteria (to be fullfilled at the latest 4 hours after ICU admission) to randomization (to be done in 8 hours from ICU admission) Other probable cause of hyperlactatemia Patients transferred from another intensive care unit (ICU) Patients with active hematological malignancy

Randomization

Randomization will be done using a computer-based algorithm created by an independent statistician, to allow immediate and concealed allocation to the intervention arm. The patients will be stratified according to the site and presence/absence of chronic hypertension (with known medication). A varying block size will be used. Each patient will be allocated a unique patient ID-number. Randomization is targeted to be performed within 2 h after fulfillment of the inclusion criteria in the ICU (but no later than 4 h, the fulfillment of which is an exclusion criterion).

Primary outcome measure

Days alive in 30 days – with normal arterial blood lactate (first confirmed value of <2 mmol/L and without any inotropic or vasopressor agent)

Secondary outcome measures

Time to normalization of lactate Days alive with normal lactate (all values <2 mmol/L) in 30 days Days alive without the use of inotropic or vasopressor agents in 30 days Days alive without RRT in 30 days Days alive without mechanical ventilation in 30 days Days alive without any organ support (mechanical ventilation, RRT) in 30 days New AKI according to the KDIGO classification (stages I–III) 8.. Days alive outside hospital in 90 days Total amount of norepinephrine given until day 5 Number/total number of the following adverse reactions: ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation atrial fibrillation myocardial infarction skin necrosis stroke secondary bowel ischemia limb ischemia total numbers of serious adverse reactions (SAR) (numbers of patients and reactions)

Exploratory outcomes

All-cause mortality at day 90.

Blinding

Blinding of health care providers will not be feasible which infers that all clinical staff caring for the patients will be aware of the allocation during the intervention period. The two interventions may lead to different use of concomitant interventions, but the lack of blinding may also result in differences in the use of concomitant interventions during the intervention period. Hence, we will provide suggestions for the use of relevant co-interventions (see “Concomitant interventions”) and will record the use of them. Information on the primary outcome and other secondary outcomes will be provided by the local investigators from patient charts, but the statistician doing the analyses will be blinded to which intervention the patients received. Information on whether the exploratory outcome of death occurs will be acquired through public registers (the National Civil Registries) without knowledge of which intervention group the patient was allocated to. In Switzerland, the patient or relatives will be contacted. The assessor of the outcomes will be blinded to the study group. The members of DSMB will remain blinded unless they request otherwise.

Participant discontinuation and withdrawal

Patients who are withdrawn from the trial protocol will be followed up and analyzed as the remaining patients (intention-to-treat analysis, ITT).

Suspension of the protocol

The protocol may temporarily be suspended for the individual patient, at the discretion of the treating clinicians, if the patient is to be resuscitated in the presence of any acute condition superimposed on septic shock, as judged by the investigator. Patients to be operated on at operational theatres may also have their procedures suspended during that time.

Severe adverse reactions (SARs)

SARs to norepinephrine: Cerebral hemorrhage seen on computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan Cardiac arrhythmia resulting in the use of medication or electrical cardioversion Psychiatric symptoms resulting in the use of antipsychotic drugs Not registered as SARs to norepinephrine: tremor, headache, dizziness, and sweats are not registered. Hypertension is not registered. Dyspnea itself is not regarded as a serious adverse event (SAE). Hypersalivation, nausea, and vomiting are not registered. SAEs will not be recorded as an entity, because the majority of septic ICU patients will experience several SAEs during their critical illness. The most important SAEs will be captured in the secondary outcome measures and in the daily Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA)-scoring. Patient charts will contain daily registrations of detailed clinical data, which can be obtained on request from the medical authorities. Trial investigators are to report suspected unexpected serious adverse reactions (SUSARs) without undue delay to the chief investigators, which in turn will report these to the Swiss, Finnish and Danish Health and Medicine Authorities within 7 days after the report has been received.

Statistical plan and data analysis

Sample size and power

We assume 25 % mortality in both study groups, and this phase II trial will be unlikely to have the power to detect any mortality difference between the intervention groups. Therefore, a surrogate endpoint (days alive in 30 days with normal lactate and without vasopressors) combining survival, need for vasopressor therapy, and normalization of hyperlactatemia has been chosen. A post-hoc analysis from the FINNAKI study in a similar study population revealed a 30-day mortality rate of 25 %, and in 98 patients (of 128) who survived the mean time alive without vasopressors or hyperlactatemia within 30 days (720 h) was 650 h (SD 35) (unpublished data). In the power analysis we assumed that the time with vasopressors or hyperlactatemia among the 30-day survivors follow a log-normal distribution with mean of 70 h (70 minus “treatment effect among survivors for the TTP group”) and SD 30, this simulated value was subtracted from 720 h (the number of hours in 30 days). For each configuration of sample size, mortality rate and expected treatment effect we simulated data and compared the two groups using a Mann-Whitney test. Ten thousand simulations were done for each configuration to compute the power. The required sample sizes (both groups combined) to achieve 80 % power as a function of mortality proportion (i.e., fraction of patients with a zero value for the primary endpoint) and average change in the primary endpoint among survivors are displayed in Table 1.
Table 1

Power calculations

Change among survivors in hours (and among all patients)
Mortality proportion12 h (9 h)18 h (13.5 h)24 h (18 h)
20 %34015690
25 %438194118
30 %562270158
35 %660348210
40 %660456282
Power calculations The clinically relevant difference in the study primary outcome to be tested is 18 h (Amendment 1 to the study protocol – 26 October 2015). An adaptive sample size adjustment will be employed. After 150 patients have been included and followed for 30 days, the study statistician (Assoc. Professor T. Lange, University of Copenhagen) will redo the power calculation based on the observed mortality proportion and the observed dispersion in the primary outcome. The calculation will be done without un-blinding the study and will follow the previous recommendation by Chow and Chang (based on the revised power calculation a suggestion for a revised sample size will be presented to the investigators) (https://www.crcpress.com/Adaptive-Design-Methods-in-Clinical-Trials-Second-Edition/Chow-Chang/9781439839874).

Statistical methods

The study flowchart is included as Fig. 1. A Mann-Whitney test for differences in continuous outcomes including the primary outcome measure, and Fisher’s exact test for dichotomous variables will be done as a primary analysis. A sensitivity analysis in subgroups of patients with and without previous hypertension will be performed. The components of the primary outcome measure (time to normalization of lactate, time to stopping of all vasoactive drugs, and day-30 mortality) are all included among secondary outcomes. In all tests a p value of less than 0.05 will be considered statistically significant. If missing data are >5 %, multiple imputations will be performed. A detailed statistical analysis plan is provided in Appendix 5.
Fig. 1

The TARTARE-2S study flowchart

The TARTARE-2S study flowchart

Interim analysis

As this trial is a feasibility trial we do not consider an interim analysis appropriate. As an interim analysis will not be performed, statistical early stopping criteria will not be applied. However, the Data Safety and Monitoring Board (DSMB) has full access to the safety data and will do a thorough review of these after 100 patients, and may recommend stopping the study anytime based on safety concerns.

Intervention accountability

Every patient will be allocated a registration sheet to be kept in the site master file. The initials, birth date, screening number, time for randomization, and study arm will be included. The compliance of trial arm targets for each study patient will be checked hourly for the first 72 h, and clinical problems and given hemodynamic treatments will be registered until the study combined endpoint has been fulfilled, up to day 30. The originals for these documents will be kept as the study source data at each site.

Registration

ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02579525 (Registration date 19 October 2015).

Data to be registered

The continuous data on hemodynamic parameters will be registered as 10-min medians using electronic PMDS, when possible and otherwise registered each hour to 72 h. For other data please see “Appendix 4.” The Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials (SPIRIT) figure regarding study interventions and timing is provided as Fig. 2.
Fig. 2

The schedule of enrollment, interventions, and assessments

The schedule of enrollment, interventions, and assessments

Data handling

Data will be entered into an electronic, web-based electronic Case Report Form (eCRF) from patient notes by trial personnel. Each patient will receive a unique trial identification number. Trial investigators will receive a personal username and passwords to access the TARTARE-2S trial web-page. Each site will only have access to site-specific data. Data will be handled according to the Swiss, Finnish and Danish laws. All original records (including Informed Consent Forms, eCRFs, and relevant correspondences) will be archived at trial sites for 15 years. The clean electronic trial database file will be delivered to the Inselspital Data Archive and maintained for 15 years and anonymized, if requested by the authorities.

Monitoring

The trial will be externally monitored (Clinical Trial Unit, Bern) to Good Clinical Practice (GCP) standards. A centralized day-to-day monitoring of the eCRF will be done by the coordinating investigator.

Ethical considerations

In addition to fluid therapy, norepinephrine administration to increase the MAP is a key element in the treatment of septic shock. As the intervention is very frequent, but not evidence-based and carries potential risks, we consider it to be in the wider interests of society and patients to perform research in this area, as clearly highlighted in a recent systematic review and meta-analysis [9]. The present trial is a phase II trial, i.e., a trial assessing both the feasibility of the protocol in a clinical setting and a patient-centered surrogate outcome. Should the trial prove feasible with separation between the two interventions, and suggest a benefit in terms of the primary endpoint, a larger phase III trial assessing 90-day mortality is intended. Thus, it is the opinion of the Steering Committee that this study is very important and ethically justified. In some retrospective observational studies, low MAP has been associated with an increased risk of acute kidney injury (AKI) [22-24]. However, causal inferences cannot be drawn from observational data with the inherent limitation that the most severely ill patients inevitably have lower MAPs. In the present study: (1) a minimum safety limit of MAP has been set to the TTP group, (2) the study patients are carefully monitored and re-evaluated, and treatment goals are registered every hour. In addition, (3) the treating clinician should allow lower MAP values only in situations without any clinical problems, such as oliguria, in which cases individual use of higher MAP targets is allowed (and also in previously hypertensive patients). Thus, the Steering Committee has strong reasons to believe that the care of the study patients will be better and safer than the highly varying standard clinical practice; e.g., regarding fluid treatment [25]. In addition, high-quality randomized controlled trials (RCTs) focusing on unproven but widely used standard treatments have been shown to change clinical practice and to save future critically ill patients from untoward adverse events and death, e.g., by avoiding the use of starch in septic shock [26]. Treatment of septic shock is time-dependent and many patients will be unconscious and, due to fever and/or septic brain dysfunction, unable to consider an informed consent. Inclusion of only conscious less severely ill patients would cause a significant bias and jeopardize the study results. Furthermore, the treatment separation and effect are plausibly most obvious the earlier the randomization occurs. Of note, both treatment arms are within the frame of current standard clinical practice and no investigational drugs are used, thus, ethically allowing the potential use of a deferred consent. Therefore, patients will be included either with a deferred consent, or a proxy consent (next of kin) according to national laws in Finland, Switzerland, and Denmark (two-physician consent also allowed in Denmark). The patient or next of kin and/or general practitioner will be asked for a deferred consent if required by national law. The trial will adhere to the trial protocol, the Helsinki Declaration in its latest form, GCP guidelines, and the national laws in the countries involved. Inclusion will start after approval by the ethics committees, medicines agencies, data protection agencies, and health authorities in the countries of the trial sites.

Informed consent

The process leading to obtaining informed consent will be in compliance with all applicable regulations and national laws. Patients with septic shock are seldom able to consider their consent due to fever, mechanical ventilation, sedation, and/or septic encephalopathy. However, those patients who regain consciousness will be asked for informed consent as soon as possible. The possible benefit of the treatment (and the separation between the study arms) will plausibly be larger the sooner the treatment is started. In addition, it is important not to introduce a significant bias to the study results by only including less severely ill patients because most plausibly the most severely ill patients will benefit most. The consenting party will be provided with written and oral information about the trial so they are able to make an informed decision about participation in the trial. Written information and the consent form will be subjected to review and approval by the National Ethics Committee.

Duration

For clinical treatment, primary and secondary endpoint up to 30 days; follow-up exploratory endpoint until day 90.

Co-enrollment

Possible simultaneous co-enrollment to any other RCT will be discussed by the Management Committee.

Timeline

Trial sites determined – September 2015 Governance approval applications submitted – October 2015 First participant enrolled – April 2016 Last participant enrolled – November 2017 Follow-up completed – December 2017 Data analysis and submission for the main publication – March 2018 Laboratory analyses completed – June 2018 Publications of clinical sub-studies and laboratory analyses completed – December 2018

Trial organization

Steering Committee

Ville Pettilä, Helsinki University Hospital, and Inselspital, Bern (CI1) Jukka Takala, Inselspital, Bern, Switzerland (CI2) Stephan Jakob, Inselspital, Bern, Switzerland Anders Perner, Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet, Denmark.

Site principal investigators (PIs)

Tobias Merz, Inselspital, Bern Erika Wilkman, Helsinki University Hospital Sari Karlsson, Tampere University Hospital Anders Perner, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen

Data Safety and Monitoring Board (DSMB)

Professor Konrad Reinhart (chair), Jena Professor Peter Jüni, Bern/Toronto Professor Jan Wernerman, Stockholm

Independent statistician

Assoc. Professor Theis Lange, Centre for Research in Intensive Care and Section of Biostatistics, University of Copenhagen.

Trial sponsors

The coordinating investigators, CI1 Ville Pettilä and CI2 Jukka Takala, are trial sponsors.

Laboratory measurements

Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) plasma samples and whole blood will be drawn as soon as possible after ICU admission, and at 72 h from ICU admission for later analysis of patient-related changes in biomarkers indicating endothelial/myocardial damage, such as CD73 and vascular adhesion protein-1 (VAP-1), heparin-binding protein (HBP), chromogranin A (CgA), metabolomics, and mitochondrial function tests.

Publication plan

All trial results whether positive, negative, or neutral will end up in the public domain, preferably in a peer-reviewed publication. All trial sites with at least 25 randomized patients will be granted one authorship for the site PI, and each additional 25 patients will guarantee one additional authorship for the site AIs. A trial statistician (TL) will also be granted an authorship. The order of authorships for the study main publication will be as follows: VP, SJ, and AP will be the first, second, and third, and JT the last author. Other authors will be in the order of included number of patients with high-quality data: site PIs first, and AIs thereafter. The authorships for the publications of the main and sub-studies will follow the International Committee of Medical Journals Editors’ (ICMJE) principles. The full protocol and the participant-level anonymized dataset will be submitted as appendices with the main paper to be publicly available after the study publication. The SPIRIT checklist for clinical trial protocol is provided as Additional file 1.

Perspectives

Septic shock affects millions of patients worldwide annually. The results of study will – in any case – have a major influence on the clinical management/international guidelines regarding treatment of septic shock. If supporting our hypothesis of the beneficial effects of TTP, the current recommendations will have to be changed leading to major scientific and societal impacts on heath and health care costs. In case MCG proves to be better, the study results will for the first time confirm the widely recommended minimum MAP level. Given that several different pathophysiological pathways are probably in interaction and may only partly explain the clinical course of the disease, the potential strength of measuring several biomarkers/mitochondrial function/gene expression and protein synthesis in the sub-studies of this phase II study, will give us the opportunity to compare their relative importance and predictive power with regard to organ dysfunction.

Discussion

Conduct of the TARTARE-2S trial is in broad agreement with the international guidelines [7] regarding the control group. The targeted patient population fulfills the recent Sepsis-3 septic shock definition [27], representing the most severely ill septic shock patients with plausibly the highest possible chance to show a difference between the intervention arms [28], if such a difference exists. The experimental approach is supported by a recent review [9] highlighting the paucity of evidence to support the guidelines and additional evidence suggesting the relevance of more detailed monitoring of peripheral perfusion [13, 14] to guide the treatment in septic shock. The TARTARE-2S trial may be one of the first trials to bridge the gap between evidence and clinical practice and to provide detailed data on efficacy and safety of TTP to guide treatment in patients with septic shock.

Trial status

Patient recruitment has started in May 2016. Ethics and hospital approvals have been granted in Finland, and in Switzerland, and have been applied in Denmark (as of July 28, 2016).
Table 2

The trial targets for the treatment arms. (Register hourly up to 24 h (every 2 h thereafter until study endpoint using tick boxes for targets)

I. Intervention group – targeted tissue perfusion (TTP) care:
Primary targets
Capillary refill time (CRT)/every hour<3 s
Skin mottling [17]/every hourAbsent
Peripheral temperature/every hourWarm
Urine output/every hour≥0.5 mL/kg/h
Arterial lactate [7]/per 2 h<2.0 mmol/L
Mean arterial pressure (MAP)50–65 mmHg (minimum as a safety limit)
aIf previous hypertension [7] a65–70 mmHg
bIf oliguria <0.3 ml/kg [7] b2-h trial 75–80 mmHg,
If diuresis improves, continue for 2 h and re-evaluate
Secondary target
Continuous SvO2 [7], if available>65 %c
II. Control group – macrocirculatory targets-guided (MCG) standard care
Primary targets
Mean arterial pressure (MAP) [7]65–75 mmHg
aIf previous hypertension [7] a75–80 mmHg
bIf oliguria <0.3 ml/kg b2-h trial 85–90 mmHg
If diuresis better, continue for 2 h and re-evaluate
Central venous pressure (CVP) [7]8–12 mmHg
Adequate fluid therapy is indicated to restore clinical hypovolemia up to the recommended CVP level of 8–12 mmHg, if needed
Urine output [7]≥0.5 mL/kg/h
Secondary target
Continuous SvO2 [7], if available>65 %c

Dellinger et al. [7] according to the SSCG – Surviving Sepsis Campaign Guidelines: MAP, CVP, diuresis, SvO2 – 1C, lactate – 2C (1 – a recommendation, 2 – a suggestion, C – low level of evidence)

aHigher MAP targets may be required for septic shock patients with previous hypertension; band a test of providing higher MAP target for 2 h is recommended for those with oliguria

bThe treating physicians should target to the lowest possible vasopressor use to maintain the highlighted lowest possible MAP level in each treatment arm; however, allowing individual higher MAP targets with specific reasons

cMeasuring of ScVO2 is not recommended [1, 4, 5]. If monitoring is clinically required, use of a pulmonary artery catheter (PAC) is recommended. Pulse continuous cardiac output (PICCO) may be used for thermodilution cardiac output measurements

Table 3

Data to be gathered regarding each hemodynamic target and treatment decision/change. Indicate when treatment start or change (at the same time)

(a). Hemodynamic problem(s)
Hemodynamic problem(s)Tick
 Hypovolemia
 Hypervolemia
 Inadequate flow/cardiac index (CI)
 Tachycardia
 Inadequate contractility
 Inadequate afterload/hypotension
 Excessive afterload/hypertension
 Excessive vasopressor dose
(b). Given treatment(s)
Treatment(s) givenTick
 Volume
 Diuretics
 Inotrope
 Inotrope decrease
 Inotrope increase
 Vasopressor increase
 Vasopressor decrease
 Beta-blocking agent
 Vasodilating agent
  27 in total

Review 1.  Blood pressure targets for vasopressor therapy: a systematic review.

Authors:  Frederick D'Aragon; Emilie P Belley-Cote; Maureen O Meade; François Lauzier; Neill K J Adhikari; Matthias Briel; Manoj Lalu; Salmaan Kanji; Pierre Asfar; Alexis F Turgeon; Alison Fox-Robichaud; John C Marshall; François Lamontagne
Journal:  Shock       Date:  2015-06       Impact factor: 3.454

2.  Implications of Heterogeneity of Treatment Effect for Reporting and Analysis of Randomized Trials in Critical Care.

Authors:  Theodore J Iwashyna; James F Burke; Jeremy B Sussman; Hallie C Prescott; Rodney A Hayward; Derek C Angus
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2015-11-01       Impact factor: 21.405

3.  A randomized trial of protocol-based care for early septic shock.

Authors:  Donald M Yealy; John A Kellum; David T Huang; Amber E Barnato; Lisa A Weissfeld; Francis Pike; Thomas Terndrup; Henry E Wang; Peter C Hou; Frank LoVecchio; Michael R Filbin; Nathan I Shapiro; Derek C Angus
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2014-03-18       Impact factor: 91.245

4.  Lower versus higher hemoglobin threshold for transfusion in septic shock.

Authors:  Lars B Holst; Nicolai Haase; Jørn Wetterslev; Jan Wernerman; Anne B Guttormsen; Sari Karlsson; Pär I Johansson; Anders Aneman; Marianne L Vang; Robert Winding; Lars Nebrich; Helle L Nibro; Bodil S Rasmussen; Johnny R M Lauridsen; Jane S Nielsen; Anders Oldner; Ville Pettilä; Maria B Cronhjort; Lasse H Andersen; Ulf G Pedersen; Nanna Reiter; Jørgen Wiis; Jonathan O White; Lene Russell; Klaus J Thornberg; Peter B Hjortrup; Rasmus G Müller; Morten H Møller; Morten Steensen; Inga Tjäder; Kristina Kilsand; Suzanne Odeberg-Wernerman; Brit Sjøbø; Helle Bundgaard; Maria A Thyø; David Lodahl; Rikke Mærkedahl; Carsten Albeck; Dorte Illum; Mary Kruse; Per Winkel; Anders Perner
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2014-10-01       Impact factor: 91.245

5.  The relation of near-infrared spectroscopy with changes in peripheral circulation in critically ill patients.

Authors:  Alexandre Lima; Jasper van Bommel; Karolina Sikorska; Michel van Genderen; Eva Klijn; Emmanuel Lesaffre; Can Ince; Jan Bakker
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 7.598

6.  Mottling score predicts survival in septic shock.

Authors:  H Ait-Oufella; S Lemoinne; P Y Boelle; A Galbois; J L Baudel; J Lemant; J Joffre; D Margetis; B Guidet; E Maury; G Offenstadt
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2011-03-04       Impact factor: 17.440

7.  The prognostic value of the subjective assessment of peripheral perfusion in critically ill patients.

Authors:  Alexandre Lima; Tim C Jansen; Jasper van Bommel; Can Ince; Jan Bakker
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 7.598

8.  Arterial blood pressure during early sepsis and outcome.

Authors:  Martin W Dünser; Jukka Takala; Hanno Ulmer; Viktoria D Mayr; Günter Luckner; Stefan Jochberger; Fritz Daudel; Philipp Lepper; Walter R Hasibeder; Stephan M Jakob
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2009-02-03       Impact factor: 17.440

9.  Surviving Sepsis Campaign: international guidelines for management of severe sepsis and septic shock, 2012.

Authors:  R P Dellinger; Mitchell M Levy; Andrew Rhodes; Djillali Annane; Herwig Gerlach; Steven M Opal; Jonathan E Sevransky; Charles L Sprung; Ivor S Douglas; Roman Jaeschke; Tiffany M Osborn; Mark E Nunnally; Sean R Townsend; Konrad Reinhart; Ruth M Kleinpell; Derek C Angus; Clifford S Deutschman; Flavia R Machado; Gordon D Rubenfeld; Steven Webb; Richard J Beale; Jean-Louis Vincent; Rui Moreno
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2013-01-30       Impact factor: 17.440

10.  Association of arterial blood pressure and vasopressor load with septic shock mortality: a post hoc analysis of a multicenter trial.

Authors:  Martin W Dünser; Esko Ruokonen; Ville Pettilä; Hanno Ulmer; Christian Torgersen; Christian A Schmittinger; Stephan Jakob; Jukka Takala
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2009-11-16       Impact factor: 9.097

View more
  6 in total

1.  Capillary refill time for the management of acute circulatory failure: a survey among pediatric and adult intensivists.

Authors:  Matthias Jacquet-Lagrèze; Cléo Wiart; Rémi Schweizer; Léa Didier; Martin Ruste; Maxime Coutrot; Matthieu Legrand; Florent Baudin; Etienne Javouhey; François Dépret; Jean-Luc Fellahi
Journal:  BMC Emerg Med       Date:  2022-07-18

Review 2.  Expert statement for the management of hypovolemia in sepsis.

Authors:  Anders Perner; Maurizio Cecconi; Maria Cronhjort; Michael Darmon; Stephan M Jakob; Ville Pettilä; Iwan C C van der Horst
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2018-04-25       Impact factor: 17.440

Review 3.  Fluid Bolus Therapy in Pediatric Sepsis: Current Knowledge and Future Direction.

Authors:  Ben Gelbart
Journal:  Front Pediatr       Date:  2018-10-25       Impact factor: 3.418

4.  Capillary refill time variation induced by passive leg raising predicts capillary refill time response to volume expansion.

Authors:  Matthias Jacquet-Lagrèze; Nourredine Bouhamri; Philippe Portran; Rémi Schweizer; Florent Baudin; Marc Lilot; William Fornier; Jean-Luc Fellahi
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2019-08-16       Impact factor: 9.097

5.  Clinical Examination for the Prediction of Mortality in the Critically Ill: The Simple Intensive Care Studies-I.

Authors:  Bart Hiemstra; Ruben J Eck; Renske Wiersema; Thomas Kaufmann; Geert Koster; Thomas W L Scheeren; Harold Snieder; Anders Perner; Ville Pettilä; Jørn Wetterslev; Frederik Keus; Iwan C C van der Horst
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2019-10       Impact factor: 7.598

6.  Trends in Adaptive Design Methods in Dialysis Clinical Trials: A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Conor Judge; Robert Murphy; Catriona Reddin; Sarah Cormican; Andrew Smyth; Martin O'Halloran; Martin J O'Donnell
Journal:  Kidney Med       Date:  2021-08-20
  6 in total

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