Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10553/128757
Title: | Clinical relevance of timing of assessment of ICU mortality in patients with moderate-to-severe Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome | Authors: | Villar, J González-Martin, JM Añón, JM Ferrando, C Soler, JA Mosteiro, F Mora-Ordoñez, JM Ambrós, A Fernández, L Montiel, R Vidal, A Muñoz, T Pérez-Méndez, L Rodríguez Suárez, Pedro Miguel Fernández, C Fernández, RL Szakmany, T Burns, KEA Steyerberg, EW Slutsky, AS |
UNESCO Clasification: | 32 Ciencias médicas 3201 Ciencias clínicas |
Issue Date: | 2023 | Journal: | Scientific Reports | Abstract: | Mortality is a frequently reported outcome in clinical studies of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). However, timing of mortality assessment has not been well characterized. We aimed to identify a crossing-point between cumulative survival and death in the intensive care unit (ICU) of patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS, beyond which the number of survivors would exceed the number of deaths. We hypothesized that this intersection would occur earlier in a successful clinical trial vs. observational studies of moderate/severe ARDS and predict treatment response. We conducted an ancillary study of 1580 patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS managed with lung-protective ventilation to assess the relevance and timing of measuring ICU mortality rates at different time-points during ICU stay. First, we analyzed 1303 patients from four multicenter, observational cohorts enrolling consecutive patients with moderate/severe ARDS. We assessed cumulative ICU survival from the time of moderate/severe ARDS diagnosis to ventilatory support discontinuation within 7-days, 28-days, 60-days, and at ICU discharge. Then, we compared these findings to those of a successful randomized trial of 277 moderate/severe ARDS patients. In the observational cohorts, ICU mortality (487/1303, 37.4%) and 28-day mortality (425/1102, 38.6%) were similar (p = 0.549). Cumulative proportion of ICU survivors and non-survivors crossed at day-7; after day-7, the number of ICU survivors was progressively higher compared to non-survivors. Measures of oxygenation, lung mechanics, and severity scores were different between survivors and non-survivors at each point-in-time (p < 0.001). In the trial cohort, the cumulative proportion of survivors and non-survivors in the treatment group crossed before day-3 after diagnosis of moderate/severe ARDS. In clinical ARDS studies, 28-day mortality closely approximates and may be used as a surrogate for ICU mortality. For patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS, ICU mortality assessment within the first week of a trial might be an early predictor of treatment response. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10553/128757 | ISSN: | 2045-2322 | DOI: | 10.1038/s41598-023-28824-5 | Source: | Scientific Reports [2045-2322], v. 13:1543 (Enero 2023) |
Appears in Collections: | Artículos |
SCOPUSTM
Citations
4
checked on Nov 24, 2024
WEB OF SCIENCETM
Citations
3
checked on Nov 24, 2024
Page view(s)
64
checked on Nov 16, 2024
Download(s)
33
checked on Nov 16, 2024
Google ScholarTM
Check
Altmetric
Share
Export metadata
Items in accedaCRIS are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.