1. Effect of early administration of tetracosactide on mortality and host response in critically ill patients requiring rescue surgery: a sensitivity analysis of the STOPSHOCK phase 3 randomized controlled trial
- Author
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Giorgio Noera, Alfio Bertolini, Laura Calzà, Mercedes Gori, Annalisa Pitino, Graziella D’Arrigo, Colin Gerard Egan, and Giovanni Tripepi
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Critical care ,Melanocortin ,Cytokine ,Mortality ,Survival ,Bleeding ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Military Science - Abstract
Abstract Background Undifferentiated shock is recognized as a criticality state that is transitional in immune-mediated topology for casual risk of lethal microcirculatory dysfunction. This was a sensitivity analysis of a drug (tetracosactide; TCS10) targeting melanocortin receptors (MCRs) in a phase 3 randomized controlled trial to improve cardiovascular surgical rescue outcome by reversing mortality and hemostatic disorders. Methods Sensitivity analysis was based on a randomized, two-arm, multicenter, double-blind, controlled trial. The Naïve Bayes classifier was performed by density-based sensitivity index for principal strata as proportional hazard model of 30-day surgical risk mortality according to European System for Cardiac Operative Risk Evaluation inputs-outputs in 100 consecutive cases (from August to September 2013 from Emilia Romagna region, Italy). Patients included an agent-based TCS10 group (10 mg, single intravenous bolus before surgery; n = 56) and control group (n = 44) and the association with cytokines, lactate, and bleeding-blood transfusion episodes with the prior-risk log-odds for mortality rate in time-to-event was analyzed. Results Thirty-day mortality was significantly improved in the TCS10 group vs. control group (0 vs. 8 deaths, P
- Published
- 2024
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