We tested the hypothesis that the ability of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) to prevent death from fecal peritonitis is influenced by the composition of the antibiotic regimen with which it is administered. We used a rodent model of polymicrobial peritoneal contamination and infection and the concept of clinical modeling randomized trials (CMRTs), which includes the conditions of randomized, clinical trials and complex clinical interventions (e.g., anesthesia, volume substitution, antibiotics, surgery, postoperative analgesia). With the peritonitis model we obtained a mortality dose-response curve that was sensitive to antibiotic prophylaxis. G-CSF was most efficacious when it was administered both prophylactically and after the onset of peritonitis. Cefuroxime/metronidazole, ofloxacin/metronidazole, and amoxicillin/clavulanate improved survival in combination with G-CSF best, whereas cefotaxime or ceftriaxone with and without metronidazole did not. G-CSF administration was associated with improved polymorphonuclear neutrophil phagocytosis and enhanced bacterial clearance. Pro-inflammatory cytokine release (tumor necrosis factor-a, interleukin-6, macrophage inflammatory protein-2) was decreased in plasma and in the peritoneal fluid. Their expression was lowered in various organs on the protein and mRNA level. The results were used to design a clinical trial to test the ability of G-CSF to prevent serious infections in patients with colorectal cancer surgery. In this trial G-CSF application and antibiotic prophylaxis were performed with the most effective scheduling and combinations (cefuroxime/metronidazole and ofloxacin/metronidazole) as defined here.
This prospective randomized trial supports the clinical observation that NT causes more subjective inconvenience than GT. In cases when a prolonged postoperative ileus is expected, decisions for a prophylactic decompressing tube system have to weigh up the possibilities of different averse clinical as well as subjective outcomes. It is then preferable to include patients' preferences in the individual decision making process (shared-decision making).
The analysis of clinical relevance of study endpoints should be the first and not the last step of studies to evaluate surgical technology. It cannot be based purely on intuition; it must make use of scientifically accepted techniques (e.g. qualitative analysis).
Hypertension is proposed as a risk factor among others (high age, diabetes mellitus, and pre- and intraoperative bleeding) for adverse outcomes, such as severe infections, leading to sepsis and to multiple organ failure as the most deleterious complication. Hypertension was modeled with spontaneous hypertensive rats (SHR) and Dahl salt-sensitive (DS) rats and the infective complication by polymicrobial, peritoneal contamination, and infection (PCI). The concept of clinic modeling randomized trials was used to simulate clinical complexity, including a relevant antibiotic prophylaxis in combination with granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) and clinical trial conditions. Outcome parameters were: survival, systemic cytokines (protein), and organ-specific cytokine levels (mRNA). With low complexity (no prophylaxis), 28% of the animals in the Wistar and 50% in the SHR group survived (P=0.17). Tumor necrosis factor-alpha levels were lower in the liver of SHR vs. Wistar rats with PCI (P<0.01). The anti-inflammatory cytokine interleukin (IL)-10 was expressed on a higher level in SHR with PCI compared with Wistar rats (P<0.01). With increased complexity (antibiotic and G-CSF prophylaxis) the survival rate was increased from 50% in Wistar rats to 89% in SHR (P<0.01) and the mRNA expression of IL-6 was decreased in the kidney of SHR (P<0.05). Survival rate was 44% in the DS rats vs. 67% of the Wistar rats (P=0.18). The mRNA expression of tumor necrosis factor-alpha and IL-10 was reduced (P<0.01) by pretreatment in the liver of DS rats with PCI. The hypertensive, genetically distinct SHR and DS rats express different patterns of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokine levels after PCI. G-CSF and antibiotic prophylaxis increases only in SHR survival and decreases IL-6 mRNA expression in the kidney significantly.
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