Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
Sodium Bicarbonate for the Treatment of Severe Metabolic Acidosis With Moderate or Severe Acute Kidney Injury in ICU
Sponsor: University Hospital, Montpellier
Summary
Severe metabolic acidemia in the critically ill (pH equal or less than 7.20; PaCO2 equal or less than 45mmHg and bicarbonate concentration equal or less than of 20 mmol/l) is associated with a 50% rate of day 28 mortality. Moderate to severe acute kidney injury is a frequent cause of metabolic acidemia in the critically ill. When both severe metabolic acidemia and moderate to severe acute kidney injury are observed, day 28 mortality is approximatively 55-60%. Severe acidemia has been shown to be a biomarker of severity but may also contribute by itself to outcome. Investigators recently performed a multiple center randomised clinical trial (BICARICU-1) that suggests that sodium bicarbonate infusion titrated to maintain the pH equal or more than 7.30 is associated with a higher survival rate (secondary endpoint) in patients presenting both severe metabolic acidemia and moderate to severe acute kidney injury patients. Whether sodium bicarbonate infusion may improve long term survival (Day 90, primary outcome) in these severe acute kidney injury patients is currently unknown.
Official title: Sodium Bicarbonate for the Treatment of Severe Metabolic Acidosis With Moderate or Severe Acute Kidney Injury in the Critically Ill: a Randomized Clinical Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
640
Start Date
2019-10-07
Completion Date
2024-06-17
Last Updated
2026-06-15
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Sodium bicarbonate infusion
Patients randomly assigned to bicarbonate group will receive intravenous 4.2% sodium bicarbonate titrated from 125ml to 250ml in 30min at physician's discretion to target a pH equal or above 7.30. Bicarbonate infusion will be repeated up to 1000ml per 24h. Arterial blood gases will be repeated from 3 to 6 times during the first 24h at physician's discretion. Bicarbonate infusion recommendations will be as follow: a central line is recommended, infusion will be slow (125-250ml in 30 min, no intravenous push), careful surveillance of metabolic alkalosis, cardiogenic pulmonary edema, kalemia, natremia and calcemia. Repeated arterial blood gases will be suggested to monitor these critically ill patients and physicians will be reinformed of the potential side effects of sodium bicarbonate infusion.
Locations (1)
Service de médecine intensive et réanimation
Montpellier, France