The Vitamins in Sepsis Parade Begins

A couple years back, we saw one of the first reports describing the potential efficacy of treating sepsis with a cocktail of vitamin C, thiamine, and steroids. These observational findings have been viewed with a healthy dose of skepticism while awaiting prospective, randomized evidence with regard to their validity.

Well, here’s one of the first: a short communication from CITRIS-ALI, a randomized clinical trial that almost, sort of, not quite, addresses the question of interest. This study was designed and initiated well before the aforementioned observational report, and it examines vitamin C monotherapy in patients with sepsis and acute respiratory distress syndrome. Their primary outcome and goal was to see if vitamin C could reduce sequential organ failure assessment scores, along with biological markers of inflammation and vascular injury.

With 1,262 patients screened leading to 167 patients receiving their randomized interventions, the answer is: no. Neither modified SOFA scores, c-reactive protein, nor thrombomodulin were different between groups.

But, wait! There’s more! In fact, 46 additional pre-specified secondary outcomes – 43 of which showed no difference. These included both the esoteric – angiopoietin-2 levels, tissue factor pathway inhibitor – and patient-oriented. It is these patient-oriented outcomes that pique the most interest: at 28 days, mortality in the vitamin C group was 29.8%, as compared with 46.3% with placebo. Ventilator-free days and ICU-free days similarly favored the vitamin C cohort.

So, interesting data incapable of informing practice. Another small sample, designed (appropriately) around a different target and primary outcome, with a secondary outcome still falling into the realm of hypothesis-generating. This will likely influence no one. Anyone already giving vitamins in sepsis – cheap, likely harmless – will continue to do so, and those awaiting a more informative trial will, also, continue to do so.

“Effect of Vitamin C Infusion on Organ Failure and Biomarkers of Inflammation and Vascular Injury in Patients With Sepsis and Severe Acute Respiratory Failure”

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2752063