UMIN-CTR Clinical Trial

Unique ID issued by UMIN UMIN000040528
Receipt number R000046172
Scientific Title The effect of high-dose vitamin C in patients with sepsis: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
Date of disclosure of the study information 2020/05/26
Last modified on 2022/03/13 08:31:49

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Basic information

Public title

The effect of high-dose vitamin C in patients with sepsis: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials

Acronym

The effect of high-dose vitamin C in patients with sepsis

Scientific Title

The effect of high-dose vitamin C in patients with sepsis: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials

Scientific Title:Acronym

The effect of high-dose vitamin C in patients with sepsis

Region

Japan North America


Condition

Condition

Sepsis

Classification by specialty

Intensive care medicine

Classification by malignancy

Others

Genomic information

NO


Objectives

Narrative objectives1

Sepsis is a dysregulated inflammatory response to an infection and remains a significant public health burden over the world.
Vitamin C has been focused due to its anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties. A previous randomized controlled trial suggested high-dose vitamin C, compared to low-dose vitamin C and placebo, improved Sequential Organ failure Assessment (SOFA) score in patients with sepsis [J Tlans Med 2014:12(1):32].
Recently, more attention has been paid to vitamin C or the combination therapy of Hydrocortisone, vitamin C (Ascorbic acid) and Thiamin (HAT therapy) as a potential adjunct therapy for sepsis. Marik et al reported significant improvement of survival in septic patients who received HAT therapy in 2017 [CHEST 2017;151(6):1229-1238]. Since this study was a relatively small retrospective before-and-after study, several randomized controlled trials have been conducted to verify this result. However, sample sizes of these randomized trials were not large enough to conclude its effect on the mortality in patients with sepsis. Side effects of high-dose vitamin C were previously reported though it is rare [Clin Nephrol 2017;88:354-358]. Therefore, there is a need to summarize the currently available evidence regarding the use of vitamin C in patients with sepsis. We aimed to conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) to investigate the effect of vitamin C therapy on mortality in patients with sepsis.

Basic objectives2

Safety,Efficacy

Basic objectives -Others


Trial characteristics_1

Confirmatory

Trial characteristics_2

Others

Developmental phase

Not applicable


Assessment

Primary outcomes

Short term mortality including 28-day mortality, 30-day mortality, or in-hospital mortality

Key secondary outcomes

ICU length of stay
Hospital length of stay
Duration of vasopressors
Delta SOFA at 72-96 hours
Ventilator-free days
Adverse events
Sub-group analysis based on mean/median control SOFA score.
Sub-group analysis based on HAT therapy vs. non-HAT therapy.


Base

Study type

Others,meta-analysis etc


Study design

Basic design


Randomization


Randomization unit


Blinding


Control


Stratification


Dynamic allocation


Institution consideration


Blocking


Concealment



Intervention

No. of arms


Purpose of intervention


Type of intervention


Interventions/Control_1


Interventions/Control_2


Interventions/Control_3


Interventions/Control_4


Interventions/Control_5


Interventions/Control_6


Interventions/Control_7


Interventions/Control_8


Interventions/Control_9


Interventions/Control_10



Eligibility

Age-lower limit

18 years-old <=

Age-upper limit


Not applicable

Gender

Male and Female

Key inclusion criteria

We included trials with the following characteristics:
1. Study type: RCT.
2. Patient population: Patients aged above or equal to 18 years with sepsis based on any one of Sepsis-1, Sepsis-2, or Sepsis-3 definitions.
3. Intervention: Intravenous high-dose vitamin C (greater than or equal to 1.5g every 6 hours or 25mg/kg every 6 hours)
4. Control: Placebo or no intervention.

Key exclusion criteria

We excluded articles that included patients <18 years, published in non-English and are conference proceedings.

Target sample size



Research contact person

Name of lead principal investigator

1st name Ryota
Middle name
Last name Sato

Organization

Cleveland Clinic

Division name

Critical Care Medicine

Zip code

44195

Address

9500 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH, USA

TEL

1-216-296-8700

Email

st051035@gmail.com


Public contact

Name of contact person

1st name Ryota
Middle name
Last name Sato

Organization

Cleveland Clinic

Division name

Critical Care Medicine

Zip code

44195

Address

9500 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH, USA

TEL

1-216-296-8700

Homepage URL


Email

st051035@gmail.com


Sponsor or person

Institute

Cleveland Clinic.

Institute

Department

Personal name



Funding Source

Organization

None

Organization

Division

Category of Funding Organization

Other

Nationality of Funding Organization



Other related organizations

Co-sponsor


Name of secondary funder(s)



IRB Contact (For public release)

Organization

This research is a systematic review and meta-analysis. Therefore this does no require IRB approval.

Address

N/A

Tel

1-216-296-8700

Email

sator2@ccf.org


Secondary IDs

Secondary IDs

NO

Study ID_1


Org. issuing International ID_1


Study ID_2


Org. issuing International ID_2


IND to MHLW



Institutions

Institutions



Other administrative information

Date of disclosure of the study information

2020 Year 05 Month 26 Day


Related information

URL releasing protocol

https://center6.umin.ac.jp/cgi-open-bin/ctr/ctr.cgi?function=brows&action=brows&recptno=R000046172&t

Publication of results

Published


Result

URL related to results and publications

https://journals.lww.com/ccmjournal/Abstract/2021/12000/Effect_of_IV_High_Dose_Vitamin_C_on_Mortalit

Number of participants that the trial has enrolled

1737

Results

Eleven randomized controlled trials (n = 1,737 patients) were included in this meta-analysis. High-dose IV vitamin C was not associated with a significantly lower short-term mortality (RR, 0.88; 95% CI, 0.73-1.06; p = 0.18; I2 = 29%) but was associated with a significantly shorter duration of vasopressor use (SMD, -0.35; 95% CI, -0.63 to -0.07; p < 0.01; I2 = 80%) and a significantly greater decline in the SOFA score at 72-96 hours (SMD, -0.20; 95% CI, -0.32 to -0.08; p < 0.01; I2 = 16%).

Results date posted

2022 Year 03 Month 13 Day

Results Delayed


Results Delay Reason


Date of the first journal publication of results

2021 Year 12 Month 01 Day

Baseline Characteristics

The reported mean/median age of participants ranged from 54 to 70 years in the vitamin C group and 56 to 69 years in the control group. Furthermore, 47.1 to71.4 percent of participants in the vitamin C group and 39.1 to 78.6 percent of participants in the control group were males. The SOFA score ranged from 8.0 to 11.8 and 7.9 to 12.4 in the vitamin C and control groups, respectively. The median control SOFA score was 9.2, IQR, 8.4 to10.3.

Participant flow

Our systematic search identified 902 articles. After the removal of duplicates, 710 articles were screened. After screening the titles and abstracts, we reviewed 59 articles in detail. Among the remaining 59 articles, 33 were protocol articles, six were different designs, three were conference proceedings, three examined low-dose vitamin C, two examined enteral vitamin C, and one did not provide mortality or any secondary outcomes; all of these were subsequently excluded. Two studies did not provide the number of patients who survived or died, and we were unable to calculate these numbers from provided mortality rates. A total of 11 RCTs enrolling 1,737 patients were included in the final meta-analysis.

Adverse events

HAT therapy was significantly associated with hypernatremia in one study.

Outcome measures

The primary outcome was short-term mortality, which was defined as 28-day mortality, 30 day mortality, or in-hospital mortality, depending on the availability of the data. The secondary outcomes were short-term mortality based on the severity of sepsis, the type of intervention, vasopressor duration, ventilator-free days, ICU length of stay, hospital LOS, delta SOFA score at 72 to 96 hours, and adverse events.

Plan to share IPD


IPD sharing Plan description



Progress

Recruitment status

Completed

Date of protocol fixation

2020 Year 05 Month 21 Day

Date of IRB

2020 Year 05 Month 21 Day

Anticipated trial start date

2020 Year 05 Month 21 Day

Last follow-up date

2021 Year 02 Month 25 Day

Date of closure to data entry


Date trial data considered complete


Date analysis concluded



Other

Other related information

A comprehensive search of three major databases of biomedical publications will be performed on 20 April 2020: MEDLINE (source: PubMed, 1966 to April 2020), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (through April 2020), Embase (1974 to April 2020) with the following keywords in each query: vitamin c, ascorbic acid, antioxidant, sepsis, systemic inflammatory response syndrome, and Multiple Organ Failure. The search terms used were: (ascorbic[tiab] OR ascorbate[tiab] OR vitamin c[tiab] OR ascorbic acid[mesh] OR antioxidant*[tiab]) AND (Sepsis[mesh] OR Sepsis[tiab] OR Systemic inflammatory response syndrome[mesh] OR Systemic inflammatory response syndrome[tiab] OR SIRS[tiab] OR Multiple Organ Failure[mesh] OR Multiple Organ Failure[tiab] OR MOF[tiab]) AND (randomized controlled trial[tiab] OR controlled clinical trial[tiab] OR randomized controlled trials[tiab] OR blind*[tiab] OR clinical trial[tiab] OR clinical trials[tiab] OR placebo*[tiab] OR random*[tiab]).
Two independent reviewers will screen the abstracts and titles of the studies and subsequently review the full-text articles for inclusion on the Rayyan.
Independent reviewers will assess the risk of bias in each trial as the methodological quality of the articles. Disagreements will be resolved by discussion, consensus and the participation of a third author, when necessary.


Management information

Registered date

2020 Year 05 Month 26 Day

Last modified on

2022 Year 03 Month 13 Day



Link to view the page

Value
https://center6.umin.ac.jp/cgi-open-bin/ctr_e/ctr_view.cgi?recptno=R000046172


Research Plan
Registered date File name

Research case data specifications
Registered date File name

Research case data
Registered date File name