Tundra Space

Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

Back to Studies
RECRUITING
NCT06320509
NA

Interest of Urinary Oxygen Partial Pressure (PO2u) in Predicting the Onset or Recovery of Acute Renal Failure During Shock States - OXYpi Study

Sponsor: University Hospital, Angers

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Shock state is defined as an acute, life-threatening, circulatory failure with impaired tissue oxygenation (or tissue hypoxia). The cause of the shock state can be septic, anaphylactic, hypovolemic or cardiogenic. Its management is based on etiological treatment and replacement of organ failures. Acute kidney injury (AKI) may be lead by renal hypoxia. Acute kidney injury is frequent in patients admitted to intensive care unit (ICU) and associated with an increased mortality. Serum creatinine is the reference biological marker in the diagnosis of Acute kidney injury. However, its use is limited by a delayed increase in plasma creatinine level in relation to the causal renal agression, at a time when renal tissue damage may already be established. Thus, the identification of a biological marker making it possible to estimate renal hypoxia continuously during a shock could allow us to identify early a situation at risk of evolving into Acute kidney injury. The renal medulla is vulnerable to tissue hypoxia with a risk of acute tubular necrosis. As in situ measurement of mPO2 is not possible in current practice in humans, several studies have shown a positive correlation between variations in mPO2/uPO2 and occurence of Acute kidney injury. In humans, studies have shown a significant association between the reduction in uPO2 in cardiac surgeries and the occurrence of postoperative Acute kidney injury. The aim of the study is to describe the association between uPO2 values and the onset of Acute kidney injury and/or the ocurrence of early recovery of renal function after Acute kidney injury. Any patient in shock (group A) or without shock and requiring urinary catheterization as part of treatment (group B) admitted to the Medical-Intensive Care Unit of Angers University Hospital is eligible for inclusion. After inclusion, a continuous uPO2 measuring probe is introduced with the placement of the urinary probe. uPO2 is collected continuously for the first 5 days of admission or until discharge from intensive care or removal of the urinary catheter. uPO2 is also measured by a gasometry on a urine sample on a multi-daily basis. Serum creatinine is collected every 12 hours (twice a day) and diuresis every two hours for 5 days.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

55

Start Date

2024-04-18

Completion Date

2028-01-18

Last Updated

2025-11-20

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BIOLOGICAL

Continuous measurement of uPO2 (both groups)

uPO2 is collected continuously for the first 5 days of admission or until discharge from intensive care or removal of the urinary catheter.

Locations (2)

University Hospital of Angers

Angers, France

Bicêtre Hospital

Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France