NEW STUDY AIMS TO STOP SEPSIS IN ITS TRACKS

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U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH 
NIH News 
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) 
<http://www.nigms.nih.gov/>

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Monday, October 2, 2006

CONTACT: Alisa Zapp Machalek, 301-496-7301, <alisa.machalek@.nih.gov>

NEW STUDY AIMS TO STOP SEPSIS IN ITS TRACKS

If you've had a heart attack or stroke, paramedics, doctors, and nurses
follow standardized protocols for what to do right away, and their
efforts improve your odds for a full recovery. That's not the case if
you have a body-wide infection known as sepsis, which can be fatal
within a few hours and is often not diagnosed until it is too late. 

Now, a new, multicenter research consortium, called Protocolized Care
for Early Septic Shock (ProCESS), is beginning a large-scale study to
determine whether specific interventions can halt the progression to
severe sepsis and septic shock. Key to the project is determining
whether there are "golden hours" during which prompt, rigorous,
standardized care can save patients' lives. 

The project may establish the first set of standard procedures to
diagnose and treat sepsis in emergency departments. 

The National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS), part of the
National Institutes of Health, launched the project this month with a
grant totaling more than $8.4 million over five years.  Derek C. Angus,
M.D., of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, leads the
consortium, which is a partnership between physicians in emergency
medicine and those in critical care medicine.

"By improving the treatment of those critically ill with sepsis, the
consortium's work will have enormous implications for the thousands of
patients who suffer from this infection," said NIH Director Elias A.
Zerhouni, M.D.  

Every year, sepsis affects more than 700,000 Americans. About 30 percent
of them die. Sepsis occurs when the body's normal reaction to an
infection goes into overdrive, causing widespread inflammation and
dramatic changes in body temperature, blood pressure, breathing, and
heart rate. It can lead to the malfunction or failure of several major
organs.

"The goal of this project is to speed recovery, increase survival rates,
and improve the long-term quality of life for those who have had
sepsis," said NIGMS Director Jeremy M. Berg, Ph.D.

One of the major challenges is to recognize sepsis when it starts.
That's because in its early stages, it is often mistaken for a milder
infection or other problems, said Angus. "A person may arrive with what
looks like a simple case of pneumonia, and the emergency department team
starts antibiotics and believes things will go well. Only when the blood
pressure drops or is no longer responsive to intravenous fluids does the
team realize it is suddenly behind the eight ball. By then, the patient
is quickly spiraling into multisystem organ failure. Starting
resuscitation at this point may already be too late."

To test ways of managing the disease during the first six hours after
diagnosis, the consortium will train teams of doctors, nurses, and other
emergency department workers at more than a dozen institutions. Like
dedicated trauma teams, the sepsis teams will focus all their attention
on one patient at a time and will follow a scripted protocol to
stabilize, diagnose, and treat sepsis. 

The protocol includes a sequence of resuscitation methods to deliver
fluids, restore blood pressure, and monitor cardiovascular function and
other organ activity. It was developed several years ago by Emanuel
Rivers, M.D., M.P.H., a researcher and physician at Henry Ford Hospital
in Detroit, where it dramatically increased survival rates.

To implement this approach across the entire country is a daunting task.
As a first step, the consortium aims to find out whether the protocol
will have similar success at multiple hospitals across the nation.

Following a year-long period of establishing and training sepsis teams,
the consortium plans to treat early severe sepsis in nearly 2,000
patients, enrolling patients over a two- to three-year period. It will
randomly assign patients to Rivers' protocol or to the existing "usual
care" approach, which does not include such aggressive resuscitation. It
will then follow all the patients for a full year after their recovery
to detect any long-term differences in health and mortality rates. 

The scientists will also measure blood levels of certain factors that
are thought to cause severe sepsis. By examining how these levels change
over time and with the different interventions, the scientists will
discover whether the factors can serve as molecular markers to help
track organ function and recovery progress in patients. This molecular
approach may also shed light on new ways to understand and treat sepsis.


And consortium researchers will study the cost-effectiveness and
logistics of establishing such protocols in emergency departments around
the country. The scientists aim to develop a blueprint, complete with
lists of tips and traps, to help hospitals adopt standardized methods
for evaluating and treating early sepsis patients. 
 
Writer: Susan Gaidos

To arrange an interview with NIGMS Director Jeremy M. Berg, Ph.D.,
contact the NIGMS Office of Communications and Public Liaison at
301-496-7301.  For more information about NIGMS funding of research on
sepsis, visit <http://www.nigms.nih.gov/Initiatives/Trauma/>.

NIGMS <http://www.nigms.nih.gov>, a component of the National Institutes
of Health, supports basic biomedical research that is the foundation for
advances in disease diagnosis, treatment, and prevention. 

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) -- "The Nation's Medical
Research Agency" -- includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a
component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the
primary federal agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and
translational medical research, and it investigates the causes,
treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more
information about NIH and its programs, visit <http://www.nih.gov>.
  
##

This NIH News Release is available online at:
http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/oct2006/nigms-2.htm.

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