• Critical care medicine · Nov 2012

    Multicenter Study

    Activated protein C and septic shock: a propensity-matched cohort study*.

    • Emily Rimmer, Anand Kumar, Steve Doucette, John Marshall, Sandra Dial, David Gurka, R Phillip Dellinger, Satendra Sharma, Charles Penner, Andreas Kramer, Kenneth Wood, John Ronald, Aseem Kumar, Alexis F Turgeon, Donald S Houston, Ryan Zarychanski, and Co-operative Antimicrobial Therapy of Septic Shock (CATSS) Database Research Group.
    • Department of Internal Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada.
    • Crit. Care Med.. 2012 Nov 1;40(11):2974-81.

    BackgroundSeptic shock is a highly inflammatory and procoagulant state associated with significant mortality. In a single randomized controlled trial, recombinant human activated protein C (drotrecogin alfa) reduced mortality in patients with severe sepsis at high risk of death. Further clinical trials, including a recently completed trial in patients with septic shock, failed to reproduce these results.ObjectiveTo evaluate the effectiveness of recombinant human activated protein C on mortality in a cohort of patients with septic shock and to explore possible reasons for inconsistent results in previous studies.DesignRetrospective, 2:1 propensity-matched, multicenter cohort study.SettingTwenty-nine academic and community intensive care units in three countries.PatientsSeven thousand three hundred ninety-two adult patients diagnosed with septic shock, of which 349 received recombinant human activated protein C within 48 hrs of intensive care unit admission between 1997 and 2007.Measurements And Main ResultsOur primary outcomes were mortality over 30 days and mortality stratified by Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II quartile. Using a propensity-matched Cox proportional hazard model, we observed a 6.1% absolute reduction in 30-day mortality associated with the use of recombinant human activated protein C (108/311 [34.7%] vs. 254/622 [40.8%], hazard ratio 0.72, 95% confidence interval 0.52-1.00, p = .05) and noted consistent reductions in mortality among Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II quartiles. A time to event analysis showed that the time to appropriate antimicrobials after documented hypotension decreased for each year of study (p = .003), a finding that was congruent with a decrease in annual mortality over the study period (odds ratio 0.96 per year [95% confidence interval 0.93-0.99], p = .003).ConclusionsIn this retrospective, propensity-matched, multicenter cohort study of patients with septic shock, early use of recombinant human activated protein C was associated with reduced mortality. Improvements in general quality of care such as speed of antimicrobial delivery leading to decreasing mortality of patients with septic shock may have contributed to the null results of the recently completed trial of recombinant human activated protein C in patients with septic shock.

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