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News Releases
Memorial Hermann Among First to Stock Xigris
Revolutionary Drug Saves One in Five Who May Otherwise Die
Houston, Texas, September 19, 2002 -- What causes more deaths than breast, colorectal,
pancreatic and prostate cancer combined? Severe sepsis is the number
one cause of death in non-coronary intensive care units. Severe sepsis
- the body's out-of-control response to an infection that can rapidly
lead to organ failure and death - can strike anyone, at any age, at
any time. Each year, severe sepsis strikes an estimated 750,000 people
in the United States, 215,000 of whom die.
Memorial Hermann Hospital was among the
first to administer a new lifesaving drug to combat severe sepsis. One
of the most complex biotech products in history, Xigris was developed
by Eli Lilly and Company. Dr. Robert Lodato, a critical care physician
at Memorial Hermann Hospital, was the principal investigator for Memorial
Hermann in a multi-center clinical trial. Researchers across the country
studied 1,690 sepsis patients, giving half of them the intravenous drug
and half a placebo.
"Xigris is a biologically engineered form of a natural blood product
- activated Protein C - that controls the body's otherwise harmful responses
to severe infection, curbing widespread inflammation and microscopic
blood clotting," says Dr. Lodato. The Food and Drug Administration
approved Xigris in November 2001 for adults with severe sepsis who face
a high risk of death. Patients fall under this category, for example,
when sepsis causes two or more organs to malfunction. The first treatment
to directly attack the way sepsis damages organs (by causing widespread
inflammation and microscopic blood clotting) and the only such treatment
of its kind shown to reduce mortality, Xigris is anticipated to save
tens of thousands of lives a year from severe sepsis, cutting deaths
by as much as 20 percent. According to Dr. Lodato, this is a dramatic
milestone considering that up until now nearly half of all patients
who came down with severe sepsis have had only a "coin's toss" chance of survival that more often resulted in death. "We view this as a significant breakthrough
after years of failed attempts with other investigational approaches,"
says Dr. Lodato. "To date, nothing has succeeded like activated
Protein C. In the past, treatment for severe sepsis consisted of eradicating
the infection with antibiotics and perhaps surgery, as well as supportive
care, such as mechanical ventilation and kidney dialysis, but none of
these supportive measures specifically treats severe sepsis. Xigris,
in essence, replenishes and enhances the body's own activated Protein
C, reversing its suppression brought on by severe sepsis."
Memorial Hermann, a not-for-profit health care system, provides quality,
comprehensive programs and services for a person's whole life. Through
its 11 hospitals located in the Texas Medical Center and the greater
Houston area, Memorial Hermann offers the convenience of health care
in neighborhoods where people live and work, as well as easy access
to the resources and technology of a university-affiliated teaching
hospital. Memorial Hermann takes a holistic approach to health care,
offering programs and services that address the physical, social, psychological
and spiritual aspects of wellbeing.
For more information, contact Media Relations.
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