PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Recombinant human activated protein C in the treatment of acute respiratory distress syndrome: a randomized clinical trial.

  • Alexander D Cornet,
  • A B Johan Groeneveld,
  • Jorrit J Hofstra,
  • Alexander P Vlaar,
  • Pieter R Tuinman,
  • Arthur van Lingen,
  • Marcel Levi,
  • Armand R J Girbes,
  • Marcus J Schultz,
  • Albertus Beishuizen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0090983
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3
p. e90983

Abstract

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Pulmonary coagulopathy may play a pathogenetic role in acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), by contributing to alveolocapillary inflammation and increased permeability. Recombinant human activated protein C (rh-APC) may inhibit this process and thereby improve patient outcome.A prospective randomized, saline-controlled, single-blinded clinical trial was performed in the intensive care units of two university hospitals, and patients with ARDS were included within 24 h after meeting inclusion criteria.A 4-day course of intravenous rh-APC (24 mcg/kg/h) (n = 33) versus saline (n = 38).The primary outcome parameter was the pulmonary leak index (PLI) of 67Gallium-transferrin as a measure of alveolocapillary permeability and secondary outcomes were disease severity scores and ventilator-free days, among others.Baseline characteristics were similar; in 87% of patients the PLI was above normal and in 90% mechanical or non-invasive ventilation was instituted at a median lung injury score of 2.5. There was no evidence that Rh-APC treatment affected the PLI or attenuated lung injury and sequential organ failure assessment scores. Mean ventilator-free days amounted to 14 (rh-APC) and 12 days (saline, P = 0.35). 28-day mortality was 6% in rh-APC- and 18% in saline-treated patients (P = 0.12). There was no difference in bleeding events. The study was prematurely discontinued because rh-APC was withdrawn from the market.There is no evidence that treatment with intravenous rh-APC during 4 days for infectious or inflammatory ARDS ameliorates increased alveolocapillary permeability or the clinical course of ARDS patients. We cannot exclude underpowering.Nederlands Trial Register ISRCTN 52566874.