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Multicenter Study
Extracorporeal cell therapy of septic shock patients with donor granulocytes: a pilot study.
- Martin Sauer, Gabriele Nöldge-Schomburg, Jens Altrichter, Katharina Kaftan, Thomas Birken, Doris Gloger, Martin Gloger, Jörg Henschel, Heiko Hickstein, Ernst Klar, Sebastian Koball, Annette Pertschy, and Steffen R Mitzner.
- Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology, Medical Faculty of University of Rostock, Ernst-Heydemann-Str. 6, Rostock, D-18057, Germany.
- Crit Care. 2011 Jan 1;15(2):R82.
IntroductionNeutrophil granulocytes are the first defense line in bacterial infections. However, granulocytes are also responsible for severe local tissue impairment. In order to use donor granulocytes, but at the same time to avoid local side effects, we developed an extracorporeal immune support system. This first-in-man study investigated whether an extracorporeal plasma treatment with a granulocyte bioreactor is tolerable in patients with septic shock. A further intention was to find suitable efficacy end-points for subsequent controlled trials.MethodsThe trial was conducted as a prospective uncontrolled clinical phase I/II study with 28-day follow-up at three university hospital intensive care units. Ten consecutive patients (five men, five women, mean age 60.3 ± 13.9 standard deviation (SD) years) with septic shock with mean ICU entrance scores of Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) II of 29.9 ± 7.2 and of Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS) II of 66.2 ± 19.5 were treated twice within 72 hours for a mean of 342 ± 64 minutes/treatment with an extracorporeal bioreactor containing 1.41 ± 0.43 × 10E10 granulocytes from healthy donors. On average, 9.8 ± 2.3 liters separated plasma were treated by the therapeutic donor cells. Patients were followed up for 28 days.ResultsTolerance and technical safety during treatment, single organ functions pre/post treatment, and hospital survival were monitored. The extracorporeal treatments were well tolerated. During the treatments, the bacterial endotoxin concentration showed significant reduction. Furthermore, noradrenaline dosage could be significantly reduced while mean arterial pressure was stable. Also, C-reactive protein, procalcitonin, and human leukocyte antigen DR (HLA-DR) showed significant improvement. Four patients died in the hospital on days 6, 9, 18 and 40. Six patients could be discharged.ConclusionsThe extracorporeal treatment with donor granulocytes appeared to be well tolerated and showed promising efficacy results, encouraging further studies.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00818597.
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