Back to Search Start Over

Endotoxin Removal in Septic Shock with the Alteco LPS Adsorber Was Safe But Showed no Benefit Compared to Placebo in the Double-Blind Randomized Controlled Trial—the Asset Study

Authors :
Soeren Erik Pischke
Michelle S Chew
Stepani Bendel
Anders Larsson
Miklos Lipcsey
Jan Sjölin
Sten Rubertsson
Tor Inge Tønnessen
Anne Kuitunen
Tom Eirik Mollnes
Jyrki Tenhunen
Lina De Geer
Rafael Kawati
Robert Frithiof
Hans Flaatten
Source :
Shock. 54:224-231
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2019.

Abstract

This is a non-final version of an article published in final form in Lipcsey, Tenhunen, Pischke, Kuitunen, Flaatten, De Geer, Sjölin, Frithiof, Chew, Bendel, Kawati, Larsson, Mollnes, Tønnessen, Rubertsson. Endotoxin removal in septic shock with the Alteco LPS Adsorber was safe but showed no benefit compared to placebo in the double-blind randomized controlled trial - the Asset Study. Shock. 2020;54(2):224-231. Purpose: Lipopolysaccharides (LPS) are presumed to contribute to the inflammatory response in sepsis. We investigated if extracorporeal Alteco LPS Adsorber for LPS removal in early gram-negative septic shock was feasible and safe. Also, effects on endotoxin level, inflammatory response, and organ function were assessed. Methods: A pilot, double-blinded, randomized, Phase IIa, feasibility clinical investigation was undertaken in six Scandinavian intensive care units aiming to allocate 32 septic shock patients with abdominal or urogenital focus on LPS Adsorber therapy or a Sham Adsorber, therapy without active LPS binding. The study treatment was initiated within 12 h of inclusion and given for 6 h daily on first 2 days. LPS was measured in all patients. Results: The investigation was terminated after 527 days with eight patients included in the LPS Adsorber group and seven in the Sham group. Twenty-one adverse effects, judged not to be related to the device, were reported in three patients in the LPS Adsorber group and two in the Sham group. Two patients in the Sham group and no patients in the LPS Adsorber group died within 28 days. Plasma LPS levels were low without groups differences during or after adsorber therapy. The changes in inflammatory markers and organ function were similar in the groups. Conclusions: In a small cohort of patients with presumed gram-negative septic shock, levels of circulating endotoxin were low and no adverse effects within 28 days after LPS adsorber-treatment were observed. No benefit compared with a sham device was seen when using a LPS adsorber in addition to standard care.

Details

ISSN :
15400514 and 10732322
Volume :
54
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Shock
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5d69ac6b7d8372647c3d05f7809a8dde
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/shk.0000000000001503