Albumin versus balanced crystalloid for resuscitation in the treatment of sepsis: A protocol for a randomised controlled feasibility study, “ABC-Sepsis”

Author:

Cafferkey John1ORCID,Ferguson Andrew1,Grahamslaw Julia1,Oatey Katherine2,Norrie John3,Lone Nazir3ORCID,Walsh Timothy3,Horner Daniel45,Appelboam Andy6,Hall Peter7,Skipworth Richard8,Bell Derek9,Rooney Kevin10,Shankar-Hari Manu11,Corfield Alasdair12,Gray Alasdair113ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Emergency Medicine Research Group Edinburgh (EMERGE), Department of Emergency Medicine, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

2. Edinburgh Clinical Trials Unit, Usher Institute, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

3. Department of Critical Care, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Usher Institute, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

4. Emergency Department, Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust, Salford, UK

5. Division of Infection, Immunity and Respiratory Medicine, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.

6. Academic Department of Emergency Medicine Exeter (ACADEMEx), Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Exeter Devon

7. Edinburgh Cancer Research Centre, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

8. Department of Surgery, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

9. Department of Acute Medicine, Chelsea and Westminster Campus, Imperial College London, London

10. Royal Alexandra Hospital, Paisley

11. The Queen’s Medical Research Institute, Edinburgh BioQuarter, Centre for Inflammation Research, University of Edinburgh, UK

12. Emergency Department, Royal Alexandra Hospital, NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, UK

13. Acute Care Edinburgh, Centre for Population and Health Sciences, Usher Institute, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh UK

Abstract

Background Patients presenting with suspected sepsis to secondary care often require fluid resuscitation to correct hypovolaemia and/or septic shock. Existing evidence signals, but does not demonstrate, a benefit for regimes including albumin over balanced crystalloid alone. However, interventions may be started too late, missing a critical resuscitation window. Methods ABC Sepsis is a currently recruiting randomised controlled feasibility trial comparing 5% human albumin solution (HAS) with balanced crystalloid for fluid resuscitation in patients with suspected sepsis. This multicentre trial is recruiting adult patients within 12 hours of presentation to secondary care with suspected community acquired sepsis, with a National Early Warning Score ≥5, who require intravenous fluid resuscitation. Participants are randomised to 5% HAS or balanced crystalloid as the sole resuscitation fluid for the first 6 hours. Objectives Primary objectives are feasibility of recruitment to the study and 30-day mortality between groups. Secondary objectives include in-hospital and 90-day mortality, adherence to trial protocol, quality of life measurement and secondary care costs. Discussion This trial aims to determine the feasibility of conducting a trial to address the current uncertainty around optimal fluid resuscitation of patients with suspected sepsis. Understanding the feasibility of delivering a definitive study will be dependent on how the study team are able to negotiate clinician choice, Emergency Department pressures and participant acceptability, as well as whether any clinical signal of benefit is detected.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Critical Care Nursing

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