Unbound MEDLINE

Hydrocortisone therapy for patients with septic shock. The New England journal of medicine [N Engl J Med] Journal article

 
TitleHydrocortisone therapy for patients with septic shock.
Author(s)Sprung CL, Annane D, Keh D, Moreno R, Singer M, Freivogel K, Weiss YG, Benbenishty J, Kalenka A, Forst H, Laterre PF, Reinhart K, Cuthbertson BH, Payen D, Briegel J, CORTICUS Study Group 
InstitutionHadassah Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel 91120. sprung@cc.huji.ac.il
SourceN Engl J Med 2008 Jan 10; 358(2):111-24.
MeSHAdrenal Glands
Adrenocorticotropic Hormone
Adult
Aged
Anesthetics, Intravenous
Anti-Inflammatory Agents
Double-Blind Method
Drug Therapy, Combination
Etomidate
Female
Hormones
Humans
Hydrocortisone
Injections, Intravenous
Kaplan-Meiers Estimate
Male
Middle Aged
Shock, Septic
Treatment Failure
AbstractBACKGROUND: Hydrocortisone is widely used in patients with septic shock even though a survival benefit has been reported only in patients who remained hypotensive after fluid and vasopressor resuscitation and whose plasma cortisol levels did not rise appropriately after the administration of corticotropin.
METHODS: In this multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, we assigned 251 patients to receive 50 mg of intravenous hydrocortisone and 248 patients to receive placebo every 6 hours for 5 days; the dose was then tapered during a 6-day period. At 28 days, the primary outcome was death among patients who did not have a response to a corticotropin test.
RESULTS: Of the 499 patients in the study, 233 (46.7%) did not have a response to corticotropin (125 in the hydrocortisone group and 108 in the placebo group). At 28 days, there was no significant difference in mortality between patients in the two study groups who did not have a response to corticotropin (39.2% in the hydrocortisone group and 36.1% in the placebo group, P=0.69) or between those who had a response to corticotropin (28.8% in the hydrocortisone group and 28.7% in the placebo group, P=1.00). At 28 days, 86 of 251 patients in the hydrocortisone group (34.3%) and 78 of 248 patients in the placebo group (31.5%) had died (P=0.51). In the hydrocortisone group, shock was reversed more quickly than in the placebo group. However, there were more episodes of superinfection, including new sepsis and septic shock.
CONCLUSIONS: Hydrocortisone did not improve survival or reversal of shock in patients with septic shock, either overall or in patients who did not have a response to corticotropin, although hydrocortisone hastened reversal of shock in patients in whom shock was reversed. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00147004.)
Languageeng
Pub Type(s)Journal Article
Multicenter Study
Randomized Controlled Trial
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PubMed ID18184957
  
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