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CReep and Maintenance flUid Sodium Chloride ADministration rEduction in cRitically Ill adultS
Sponsor: University Hospital, Antwerp
Summary
This study is enrolling adult patients who require a prolonged stay in the intensive care unit (ICU). These patients often receive large amounts of intravenous fluids, which can contain more salt (sodium and chloride) than the body normally needs. Extra salt and water can build up in the body and may delay recovery. The study will test two strategies: Fluid creep: These are fluids used to dilute medications or keep intravenous lines open. Usually, the choice is based on habit. In the intervention group, a salt-free glucose 5% solution will be used (if the responsible pharmacist confirms it is compatible with the medication). Maintenance fluids: These fluids cover daily needs for water and electrolytes. In the intervention group, a lower-salt solution (NaCl 0.3% in glucose 3.3%) will be given, with volume decided by the treating physician. The comparison group will receive usual care: NaCl 0.9% (commonly called "normal saline") for fluid creep, and an isotonic solution (PlasmaLyte) for maintenance fluids. The main outcome is the number of days patients are alive and free of life support (such as ventilator or dialysis) during the first 90 days. Other outcomes include abnormal sodium, chloride, or glucose levels, fluid balance and need for diuretics, kidney injury, use of dialysis, time on the ventilator, survival, and length of ICU and hospital stay. A smaller substudy (SALADIN) will measure in detail how the body handles sodium, chloride, and water using additional calculation on blood tests, urine collections, body weight, and bioimpedance analysis
Official title: Effect of Reduced Sodium Chloride in Fluid Creep and Maintenance Fluids in Critically Ill Adults: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
640
Start Date
2025-10-07
Completion Date
2028-07-30
Last Updated
2026-02-03
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Glucose 5% for fluid creep
* Medications, including concentrated electrolytes, are dissolved in glucose 5% except when another solvent is mandatory according to the responsible pharmacist. * Infusions to keep intravenous lines open are glucose 5%
NaCl 0.9% (normal saline) for fluid creep
* Medications, including concentrated electrolytes, are dissolved in NaCl 0.9% except when another solvent is mandatory according to the responsible pharmacist. * All infusions to keep intravenous lines open are NaCl 0.9%.
PlasmaLyte as maintenance fluid
* Type: Maintenance fluid is PlasmaLyte. Potassium chloride or potassium phosphate can be added (or administered separately) whenever deemed necessary. * Rate: at the discretion of the treating physician, typically 25-30 ml/kg of body weight with a maximum of 100 ml/hour, accounting for concomitant fluid sources such as nutrition and fluid creep. It is allowed to prescribe a higher volume of study maintenance fluids to include replacement if both study fluids are considered appropriate.
NaCl 0.3% in glucose 3.3% as maintenance fluid
* Type: maintenance fluid is NaCl 0.3% in glucose 3.3%. Potassium chloride or potassium phosphate can be added (or administered separately) at the discretion of the treating physician whenever necessary. * Rate: at the discretion of the treating physician, typically 25-30 ml/kg of body weight with a maximum of 100 ml/hour, accounting for concomitant fluid sources such as nutrition and fluid creep. It is allowed to prescribe a higher volume of study maintenance fluids to include replacement if both study fluids are considered appropriate
Locations (4)
ZAS Middelheim
Antwerp, Belgium
ZAS Cadix
Antwerp, Belgium
Antwerp University Hopsital (UZA)
Edegem, Belgium
ZAS Paflijn
Merksem, Belgium