School of Immunology and Microbial Sciences, King's College London, London, UK
Research and Clinical Innovation, Royal Centre for Defence Medicine, Birmingham, UK.
BMJ Open. 2019 Aug 21;9(8):e028364. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-028364.
Septic acute kidney injury (AKI) is the most common complication of septic shock and increases mortality. A large body of experimental data suggests alterations in renal perfusion occur, but this is yet to be fully assessed in humans. The aim of the current study is to observe the macro and microcirculations in both the systemic and renal circulations in a cohort of patients with early septic shock.
Single-centre, prospective, longitudinal, observational study of 50 patients with septic shock. Renal microcirculatory assessment will be performed with contrast-enhanced ultrasound, the sublingual microcirculation assessed with incident dark field microscopy and transthoracic echocardiography used to assess global flow. Patients will be enrolled as soon as possible after admission to the intensive care unit and then at +24,+48 and +96 hours. Blood samples of circulatory and renal biomarkers will be collected. Sample groups will be defined by the presence or absence of AKI and then subclassified by the severity (Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) criteria), variables will be compared within and between groups over time.
Research Ethics Committee (REC) approval has been granted for this study by Yorkshire and the Humber, Leeds West Research Ethics Committee (18/YH/0371) and due to the nature of the patients enrolled with septic shock, capacity for informed consent is likely to be lacking. Therefore, a personal consultee (friend or relative) will be consulted or a nominated consultee (clinician) in their absence. After capacity is regained, consent will then be sought from the patient in accordance with the Mental Capacity Act, UK (2005). This consent process has been approved following REC review. Results will be published in a relevant peer-reviewed journal and presented at academic meetings.
感染性休克引起的急性肾损伤(AKI)是感染性休克最常见的并发症,并且会增加死亡率。大量的实验数据表明,肾脏灌注发生了改变,但这尚未在人类中得到充分评估。本研究的目的是观察早期感染性休克患者全身和肾循环的宏观和微循环。
这是一项单中心、前瞻性、纵向、观察性研究,共纳入 50 例感染性休克患者。将使用对比增强超声评估肾微循环,使用暗场显微镜评估舌下微循环,经胸超声心动图用于评估整体血流。患者将在入住重症监护病房后尽快入组,并在+24、+48 和+96 小时进行评估。将采集循环和肾生物标志物的血液样本。根据是否存在 AKI 定义样本组,然后根据严重程度(KDIGO 标准)进行亚分类,将变量在组内和组间随时间进行比较。
这项研究已获得约克郡和亨伯、利兹西部研究伦理委员会(18/YH/0371)的伦理委员会批准,由于所招募的感染性休克患者的性质,知情同意的能力可能不足。因此,将咨询患者的个人顾问(朋友或亲属)或在其缺席的情况下咨询指定顾问(临床医生)。在恢复能力后,将根据英国(2005 年)的《精神能力法》向患者征求同意。这一同意过程已经过 REC 审查批准。研究结果将发表在相关的同行评议期刊上,并在学术会议上展示。