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Restrictive Versus Liberal Rate of Extracorporeal Volume Removal Evaluation in Acute Kidney Injury

Recruiting
18 years of age
Both
Phase N/A

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Overview

Critically ill patients with acute kidney injury and fluid overload who are frequently treated by fluid removal during dialysis are at an increased risk of complications and death. Both slower and faster rates of fluid removal may cause injury to the vital organs. This proposed clinical trial will examine the feasibility of restrictive compared with a liberal rate of fluid removal in order to develop effective treatments for fluid overload and to improve the health of critically ill patients.

Description

"Net ultrafiltration (UFnet)," also known as net fluid removal during kidney replacement therapy, has been used in the treatment of fluid overload among critically ill patients with acute kidney injury (AKI) for more than seven decades. However, the optimal rate of fluid removal (i.e., UFnet rate) remains uncertain, complications such as hypotension and cardiac arrhythmias occur frequently, and more than 40% of patients die. Observational studies in critically ill patients receiving continuous kidney replacement therapy (CKRT) show that UFnet rate has a "J" shaped association with mortality with both slower and faster UFnet rates associated with increased risk of death compared with moderate UFnet rates.

The overall objective of this randomized trial is to establish the feasibility of maintaining patients in the restrictive UFnet rate strategy during treatment with CKRT. The investigator's central hypothesis is that a restrictive UFnet rate strategy embracing a "slow and steady" approach to fluid removal is associated with fewer complications, including cardiac arrhythmias, hypotension, and death, compared with a more liberal "sprint and pause" strategy among critically ill patients.

The trial is a prospective, two-center, unblinded, parallel-group, 2-arm, comparative effectiveness, stepped-wedge cluster-randomized trial among 112 critically ill patients with AKI treated with CKRT in 10 ICUs across two hospital systems. The trial will be conducted at 5 ICUs at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, as well as 5 ICUs at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota. ICUs will be randomized 1:1 to either a restrictive or a liberal UFnet rate strategy. During the first six months, all ICUs will continue with a liberal UFnet rate strategy. Every two months thereafter or when 10 patients have been enrolled, whichever occurs first, one ICU will be randomized to deploy the restrictive UFnet rate strategy.

In the liberal group, the UFnet rate will be titrated between 2.0-5.0 mL/kg/h and maintained throughout fluid removal. In the restrictive group, the UFnet rate will be titrated between 0.5-1.5 mL/kg/h and maintained throughout fluid removal. The UFnet rates used in both strategies are used in current clinical practice.This feasibility trial will be used to support the rationale and design of a future multicenter phase III randomized trial to examine the effects of alternative UFnet rate strategies on patient-centered clinical outcomes.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Age 18 years or older
  2. Stage 3 acute kidney injury according to the Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) criteria
  3. Started or intending to start CKRT for volume management
  4. Attending intensivist or nephrologist intending to remove net fluid using CKRT for at least 48 hours

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Respiratory distress due to pulmonary edema or fluid overload in unintubated patients
  2. Massive volume infusion (i.e., >200 mL/h for >6 hours of continuous infusion)
  3. No intention to remove net fluid as determined by attending intensivist or nephrologist
  4. Attending intensivist or nephrologist believes that the protocol will not be followed
  5. Continuous net fluid removal for >48 hours prior to study enrollment
  6. Patients on chronic outpatient hemodialysis
  7. Patients with history of, or current admission for kidney transplantation
  8. Patients on comfort measures only orders.
  9. Moribund not expected to survive >24 hours
  10. Confirmed pregnancy
  11. Patients treated with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, ventricular assist device, or intra-aortic balloon pump
  12. Organ donors with neurological determination of death (i.e., brain dead donors)
  13. Drug overdose requiring CKRT for drug clearance
  14. Enrollment in a concurrent interventional clinical trial with direct impact on fluid balance (e.g., >500 mL study drug administration)

Study details

Acute Kidney Injury, Fluid Overload, Hypotension, Dialysis; Complications, Critical Illness

NCT05306964

University of Pittsburgh

25 January 2024

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