Division of Hospital Medicine, Department of Medicine, and Center for Resuscitation Science, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts (R.D.P.).
Center for Resuscitation Science and Department of Emergency Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts (L.B., A.V.G., G.T., P.V.P.).
Ann Intern Med. 2022 Feb;175(2):191-197. doi: 10.7326/M21-2103. Epub 2021 Dec 7.
Thiamine supplementation is recommended for patients with alcohol use disorder (AUD). The authors hypothesize that critically ill patients with AUD are commonly not given thiamine supplementation.
To describe thiamine supplementation incidence in patients with AUD and various critical illnesses (alcohol withdrawal, septic shock, traumatic brain injury [TBI], and diabetic ketoacidosis [DKA]) in the United States.
Retrospective observational study.
Cerner Health Facts database.
Adult patients with a diagnosis of AUD who were admitted to the intensive care unit with alcohol withdrawal, septic shock, TBI, or DKA between 2010 and 2017.
Incidence and predicted probability of thiamine supplementation in alcohol withdrawal and other critical illnesses.
The study included 14 998 patients with AUD. Mean age was 52.2 years, 77% of participants were male, and in-hospital mortality was 9%. Overall, 7689 patients (51%) received thiamine supplementation. The incidence of thiamine supplementation was 59% for alcohol withdrawal, 26% for septic shock, 41% for TBI, and 24% for DKA. Most of those receiving thiamine ( = 3957 [52%]) received it within 12 hours of presentation in the emergency department. The predominant route of thiamine administration was enteral ( = 3119 [41%]).
Specific dosing and duration were not completely captured.
Thiamine supplementation was not provided to almost half of all patients with AUD, raising a quality-of-care issue for this cohort. Supplementation was numerically less frequent in patients with septic shock, DKA, or TBI than in those with alcohol withdrawal. These data will be important for the design of quality improvement studies in critically ill patients with AUD.
National Institutes of Health.
对于患有酒精使用障碍(AUD)的患者,建议补充硫胺素。作者假设患有 AUD 的重症患者通常未给予硫胺素补充。
描述美国 AUD 合并各种危重病(酒精戒断、脓毒症性休克、创伤性脑损伤[TBI]和糖尿病酮症酸中毒[DKA])患者中硫胺素补充的发生率。
回顾性观察性研究。
Cerner Health Facts 数据库。
2010 年至 2017 年间因酒精戒断、脓毒症性休克、TBI 或 DKA 入住重症监护病房的患有 AUD 的成年患者。
酒精戒断和其他危重病中硫胺素补充的发生率和预测概率。
本研究纳入了 14998 例 AUD 患者。平均年龄为 52.2 岁,77%的参与者为男性,院内死亡率为 9%。总体而言,7689 例患者(51%)接受了硫胺素补充。硫胺素补充的发生率为酒精戒断 59%、脓毒症性休克 26%、TBI 41%和 DKA 24%。接受硫胺素治疗的大多数患者(=3957[52%])在急诊科就诊 12 小时内接受了治疗。硫胺素的主要给药途径是肠内(=3119[41%])。
未完全记录特定剂量和持续时间。
近一半的 AUD 患者未接受硫胺素补充,这对该患者群体的护理质量提出了质疑。与酒精戒断相比,脓毒症性休克、DKA 或 TBI 患者的硫胺素补充数量较少。这些数据对于设计 AUD 重症患者的质量改进研究非常重要。
美国国立卫生研究院。