| Literature DB >> 30106875 |
Marcin F Osuchowski1, Alfred Ayala2, Soheyl Bahrami1, Michael Bauer3, Mihaly Boros4, Jean-Marc Cavaillon5, Irshad H Chaudry6, Craig M Coopersmith7, Clifford S Deutschman8, Susanne Drechsler1, Philip Efron9, Claes Frostell10, Gerhard Fritsch11,12, Waldemar Gozdzik13, Judith Hellman14, Markus Huber-Lang15, Shigeaki Inoue16, Sylvia Knapp17, Andrey V Kozlov1, Claude Libert18,19, John C Marshall20, Lyle L Moldawer9, Peter Radermacher21, Heinz Redl1, Daniel G Remick22, Mervyn Singer23, Christoph Thiemermann24, Ping Wang25, W Joost Wiersinga26, Xianzhong Xiao27, Basilia Zingarelli28.
Abstract
Preclinical animal studies precede the majority of clinical trials. While the clinical definitions of sepsis and recommended treatments are regularly updated, a systematic review of preclinical models of sepsis has not been done and clear modeling guidelines are lacking. To address this deficit, a Wiggers-Bernard Conference on preclinical sepsis modeling was held in Vienna in May, 2017. The goal of the conference was to identify limitations of preclinical sepsis models and to propose a set of guidelines, defined as the "Minimum Quality Threshold in Preclinical Sepsis Studies" (MQTiPSS), to enhance translational value of these models. A total of 31 experts from 13 countries participated and were divided into six thematic Working Groups: Study Design, Humane modeling, Infection types, Organ failure/dysfunction, Fluid resuscitation, and Antimicrobial therapy endpoints. As basis for the MQTiPSS discussions, the participants conducted a literature review of the 260 most highly cited scientific articles on sepsis models (2002-2013). Overall, the participants reached consensus on 29 points; 20 at "recommendation" and nine at "consideration" strength. This Executive Summary provides a synopsis of the MQTiPSS consensus. We believe that these recommendations and considerations will serve to bring a level of standardization to preclinical models of sepsis and ultimately improve translation of preclinical findings. These guideline points are proposed as "best practices" for animal models of sepsis that should be implemented. To encourage its wide dissemination, this article is freely accessible on the Intensive Care Medicine Experimental and Infection journal websites. In order to encourage its wide dissemination, this article is freely accessible in Shock, Infection, and Intensive Care Medicine Experimental.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30106875 PMCID: PMC6133201 DOI: 10.1097/SHK.0000000000001212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Shock ISSN: 1073-2322 Impact factor: 3.454
Combined recommendations and considerations from the working group (WG) 1 and 2
| Study design (WG-1) | 1. Survival follow-up should reasonably reflect the clinical time course of the sepsis model. | R |
| 2. Therapeutic interventions should be initiated after the septic insult replicating clinical care. | ||
| 3. We recommend that the treatment be randomized and blinded when feasible. | ||
| 4. Provide as much information as possible (e.g., ARRIVE guidelines) on the model and methodology, to enable replication. | ||
| C | ||
| Humane modeling (WG-2) | 5. The development and validation of standardized criteria to monitor the well-being of septic animals is recommended. | R |
| 6. The development and validation of standardized criteria for euthanasia of septic animals is recommended (exceptions possible). | ||
| 7. Analgesics recommended for surgical sepsis consistent with ethical considerations. | ||
| C |
R indicates recommendation strength; C, consideration strength.
Combined recommendations and considerations from the working group (WG) 5 and 6
| Fluid resuscitation (WG-5) | 14. Fluid resuscitation is essential unless part of the study. | R |
| 15. Administer fluid resuscitation based on the specific requirements of the model. | ||
| 16. Consider the specific sepsis model for the timing of the start and continuation for fluid resuscitation. | ||
| 17. Resuscitation is recommended by the application of iso-osmolar crystalloid solutions. | ||
| C | ||
| Antimicrobial therapy (WG-6) | 18. Antimicrobials are recommended for preclinical studies assessing potential human therapeutics. | R |
| 19. Antimicrobials should be chosen based on the model and likely/known pathogen. | ||
| 20. Administration of antimicrobials should mimic clinical practice. | ||
| C |
R indicates recommendation strength; C, consideration strength.
Combined recommendations and considerations from the working group (WG) 3 and 4
| Infection types (WG-3) | 8. We recommend that challenge with LPS is not an appropriate model for replicating human sepsis. | R |
| 9. We recommend that microorganisms used in animal models preferentially replicate those commonly found in human sepsis. | ||
| C | ||
| Organ failure/dysfunction (WG-4) | 10. Organ/system dysfunction is defined as life threatening deviation from normal for that organ/system based on objective evidence. | R |
| 11. Not all activities in an individual organ/system need to be abnormal for organ dysfunction to be present. | ||
| 12. To define objective evidence of the severity of organ/system dysfunction, a scoring system should be developed, validated and used, or use an existing scoring system. | ||
| 13. Not all experiments must measure all parameters of organ dysfunction but animal models should be fully exploited. | ||
| C |
R indicates recommendation strength; C, consideration strength.