• Plos One · Jan 2012

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    The effect of ketoconazole on post-burn inflammation, hypermetabolism and clinical outcomes.

    • Marc G Jeschke, Felicia N Williams, Celeste C Finnerty, Noe A Rodriguez, Gabriela A Kulp, Arny Ferrando, William B Norbury, Oscar E Suman, Robert Kraft, Ludwik K Branski, Ahmed M Al-mousawi, and David N Herndon.
    • Shriners Hospitals for Children, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas, United States of America.
    • Plos One. 2012 Jan 1;7(5):e35465.

    BackgroundHypercortisolemia has been suggested as a primary hormonal mediator of whole-body catabolism following severe burn injury. Ketoconazole, an anti-fungal agent, inhibits cortisol synthesis. We, therefore, studied the effect of ketoconazole on post-burn cortisol levels and the hyper-catabolic response in a prospective randomized trial (block randomization 2:1).Methodology/Principal FindingsFifty-five severely burned pediatric patients with >30% total body surface area (TBSA) burns were enrolled in this trial. Patients were randomized to receive standard care plus either placebo (controls, n = 38) or ketoconazole (n = 23). Demographics, clinical data, serum hormone levels, serum cytokine expression profiles, organ function, hypermetabolism measures, muscle protein synthesis, incidence of wound infection sepsis, and body composition were obtained throughout the acute hospital course. Statistical analysis was performed using Fisher's exact test, Student's t-test, and parametric and non-parametric two-way repeated measures analysis of variance where applicable. Patients were similar in demographics, age, and TBSA burned. Ketoconazole effectively blocked cortisol production, as indicated by normalization of the 8-fold elevation in urine cortisol levels [F(1, 376) = 85.34, p<.001] with the initiation of treatment. However, there were no significant differences in the inflammatory response, acute-phase proteins, body composition, muscle protein breakdown or synthesis, or organ function between groups.ConclusionsBoth groups were markedly hypermetabolic and catabolic throughout the acute hospital stay. Normalization of hypercortisolemia with ketoconazole therapy had no effect on whole-body catabolism or the post-burn inflammatory or hypermetabolic response, suggesting that hypercortisolemia does not play a central role in the post-burn hypermetabolic catabolic response.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT00675714; and NCT00673309.

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