Pittard M G, Huang S J, McLean A S, Orde S R
Associate Professor and Principal Research Fellow Intensive Care Medicine, Intensive Care, Nepean Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales.
Anaesth Intensive Care. 2017 Nov;45(6):737-743. doi: 10.1177/0310057X1704500614.
In patients with septic shock, a correlation between positive fluid balance and worsened outcomes has been reported in multiple observational studies worldwide. No published data exists in an Australasian cohort. We set out to explore this association in our institution. We conducted a retrospective audit of patient records from August 2012 to May 2015 in a single-centre, 24-bed surgical and medical intensive care unit (ICU) in Sydney, Australia. All patients with septic shock were included. Exclusion criteria included length of stay less than 24 hours or vasopressors needed for less than six hours. Data was gathered on fluid balance for the first seven days of ICU admission, biochemical data and other clinical indices. The primary outcome measure was survival to hospital discharge. One hundred and eighty-six patients with septic shock were included, with an overall hospital mortality of 23.7%. Seventy-five percent of patients required mechanical ventilation, and 27.4% required haemodialysis. The mean daily fluid balance on the first day of admission was positive 1,424 ml and 1,394 ml for ICU and hospital survivors, respectively. On average, the daily fluid balance for non-survivors was higher than the survivors: ICU non-survivors were 602 (95% confidence intervals 230, 974) ml (=0.0015) and hospital non-survivors were 530 [95% confidence intervals 197, 863] ml (=0.0017) more than the survivors. In line with other recently published data, after adjustment for confounders (severity of illness based on the Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation score) we found a correlation between positive fluid balance and worsened hospital mortality in critically ill patients with sepsis and septic shock. Further research investigating rational use of fluids in this patient group is needed.
在全球多项观察性研究中,均报告了感染性休克患者的正液体平衡与不良预后之间存在相关性。在澳大利亚和新西兰队列中,尚无已发表的数据。我们着手在我们的机构中探究这种关联。我们对2012年8月至2015年5月期间,澳大利亚悉尼一家拥有24张床位的单中心外科和内科重症监护病房(ICU)的患者记录进行了回顾性审计。纳入所有感染性休克患者。排除标准包括住院时间少于24小时或使用血管升压药少于6小时。收集了ICU入院前7天的液体平衡、生化数据及其他临床指标。主要结局指标是存活至出院。纳入了186例感染性休克患者,总体医院死亡率为23.7%。75%的患者需要机械通气,27.4%的患者需要血液透析。ICU和医院存活患者入院第一天的平均每日液体平衡分别为正1424毫升和1394毫升。平均而言,非存活患者的每日液体平衡高于存活患者:ICU非存活患者比存活患者多602(95%置信区间230, 974)毫升(P=0.0015),医院非存活患者比存活患者多530 [95%置信区间197, 863] 毫升(P=0.0017)。与其他最近发表的数据一致,在对混杂因素(基于急性生理与慢性健康状况评分的疾病严重程度)进行调整后,我们发现脓毒症和感染性休克的重症患者中,正液体平衡与医院死亡率恶化之间存在相关性。需要进一步研究该患者群体中液体的合理使用情况。