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Early Haemadsorption Treatment of Major Burn Trauma Patients
Major deep burns (\>20% body surface, involving deep skin layers) and associated severe inflammatory reaction and their complication are one of the biggest challenge of intensive care. Haemoadsorption therapy, including the CytoSorb treatment is a promising novel therapeutic approach, but only case-studies are available in the literature yet. Based on data from septic shock patient treatment the investigators hypothesize that CytoSorb is beneficial in early treatment of burns. The investigators aim to conduct a randomised-controlled study to assess the clinical effectiveness (based on score systems including MODS, SOFA, APACHE II, KDIGO, ABSI), 7 and 28 days survival, intensive care length of stay, length of mechanical ventilation, resuscitation fluid need and ino/vasopressor drug doses and the presence and severity of organ dysfunctions, particularly renal dysfunction. The investigatora plan to conduct basic research to elucidate the pathophysiological background of clinical effect, including the measurement of inflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines, presence and severity of oxidative stress (lipid peroxidation, protein oxidation, reduced/oxidised glutathion levels) and organ dysfunction markers (kidney injury molecule -1, neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, cystatin-C, uromodulin).
Age
18 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
University of Pécs, Dept. of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care
Pécs, Baranya, Hungary
Start Date
January 1, 2020
Primary Completion Date
January 1, 2023
Completion Date
July 1, 2023
Last Updated
December 11, 2019
20
ESTIMATED participants
CytoSorb haemadsorption device
DEVICE
Lead Sponsor
University of Pecs
NCT04419480
NCT07179276
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