• Infection · Jul 1991

    Multicenter Study Clinical Trial

    Supplemental immunoglobulin (ivIgG) treatment in 163 patients with sepsis and septic shock--an observational study as a prerequisite for placebo-controlled clinical trials.

    • G Pilz, S Kääb, G Neeser, I Class, U Schweigart, A Brähler, O Bujdoso, R Neumann, and K Werdan.
    • Medizinische Klinik I, Klinikum Grosshadern der Universität München, Germany.
    • Infection. 1991 Jul 1;19(4):216-27.

    AbstractIn a multicenter observational study of 163 medical and surgical patients with a total of 173 episodes of sepsis or septic shock (Elebute sepsis score: 19.0 +/- 0.5), the effects of supplemental i.v. immunoglobulin (i.v. IG) treatment (unmodified polyvalent IgG pH 4.25, n = 123; for Pseudomonas sepsis, n = 50, Pseudomonas IgG) on multiple organ failure (MOF) were investigated by means of APACHE II score changes (pretreatment: 23.7 +/- 0.6). In 44% of the cases ("responders"), a prompt improvement in APACHE II score (defined as decrease greater than or equal to 4) was evident from day 0 to day 4 after onset of therapy, thus being in close time relationship to the i.v. IG administration. This improvement, associated with a better prognosis (mortality 24% vs. 55%), was found in all subgroups, most importantly the following: polyvalent IgG vs. Pseudomonas IgG treatment; medical vs. surgical patients; moderate vs. severe MOF; and gram-positive vs. gram-negative septicemia. In a small-sized second comparative nonrandomized control group (n = 27, antibiotic treatment alone) of septic patients (Elebute: 14.7 +/- 1.0) with similar MOF severity (APACHE II: 23.6 +/- 1.4), the response rate (30%) was, though not statistically significant, lower by one-third. The optimal baseline score ranges for patient inclusion into future placebo-controlled randomized i.v. IG trials were found to be 20-35 for the APACHE II score and 12-27 for the Elebute score.

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