| Literature DB >> 30374729 |
Olivier Lesur1, Eugénie Delile2, Pierre Asfar3, Peter Radermacher4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Improving sepsis support is one of the three pillars of a 2017 resolution according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Septic shock is indeed a burden issue in the intensive care units. Hemodynamic stabilization is a cornerstone element in the bundle of supportive treatments recommended in the Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC) consecutive biannual reports. MAIN BODY: The "Pandera's box" of septic shock hemodynamics is an eternal debate, however, with permanent contentious issues. Fluid resuscitation is a prerequisite intervention for sepsis rescue, but selection, modalities, dosage as well as duration are subject to discussion while too much fluid is associated with worsen outcome, vasopressors often need to be early introduced in addition, and catecholamines have long been recommended first in the management of septic shock. However, not all patients respond positively and controversy surrounding the efficacy-to-safety profile of catecholamines has come out. Preservation of the macrocirculation through a "best" mean arterial pressure target is the actual priority but is still contentious. Microcirculation recruitment is a novel goal to be achieved but is claiming more knowledge and monitoring standardization. Protection of the cardio-renal axis, which is prevalently injured during septic shock, is also an unavoidable objective. Several promising alternative or additive drug supporting avenues are emerging, trending toward catecholamine's sparing or even "decatecholaminization." Topics to be specifically addressed in this review are: (1) mean arterial pressure targeting, (2) fluid resuscitation, and (3) hemodynamic drug support.Entities:
Keywords: Catecholamines; Decatecholaminization; Fluid resuscitation; Hemodynamic support; Mean arterial pressure; Metabolic stress; Microcirculation; Sepsis; Septic shock; Vasoactive drugs; Vasopressor(s)
Year: 2018 PMID: 30374729 PMCID: PMC6206320 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-018-0449-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Prospective studies with MAP titration and peripheral (microcirculatory) or targeted tissue/organ perfusion assessment in septic shock
| Authors [ref.] | No. of patients ( | Design of MAP titration in mmHg (time at each step, min) | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ledoux et al. [ | 10 | 65, 75, 85 mmHg ( | CI ↑ |
| Bourgoin et al. [ | 2 × 14 | MAP 65 versus 85 mmHg ( | CI ↑ |
| Deruddre et al. [ | 11 | 65, 75, 85 mmHg ( | 65–75 mmHg: urine output ↑, RRI ↓ |
| Jhanji et al. [ | 16 | 60, 70, 80, 90 mmHg ( | DO2, cutaneous PtO2, cutaneous microvascular red blood cell flux (laser Doppler flowmetry) ↑ |
| Dubin et al. [ | 20 | 65, 75, 85 mmHg ( | CI, systemic vascular resistance, left and right ventricular stroke work indexes ↑ |
| Thooft et al. [ | 13 | 65, 75, 85 mmHg ( | CI, SvO2, StO2, sublingual perfused vessel density and MFI (SDF imaging) ↑ |
MAP mean arterial pressure, CI cardiac index, VO oxygen consumption, RRI renal resistive index, DO oxygen delivery, MFI microvascular flow index, SvO mixed venous oxygen saturation, StO thenar muscle oxygen saturation using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), PtO2 tissue oxygen pressure, SDF side-stream dark field
ns result not significant, ↑ increase, ↓ decrease
Systematic reviews and meta-analyses on albumin use as a resuscitation fluid in sepsis/septic shock
| Systematic reviews [ref.] | No. of patients ( | No. of RCTs included (presented) | Intervention fluid therapy | Primary outcome | Results: albumin versus crystalloids | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bansal et al. [ | 6082 | 13 (6†) | Albumin, crystalloids [HES] | Mortality | *OR 0.9 (0.8–1.01) | 2 RCTs including children and 1 case mix |
| RRT need | ? | 7 RCTs with specific comparison HES versus crystalloids | ||||
| Xu et al. [ | 5838 | 5 | Albumin, crystalloids | All-cause mortality | ** OR 0.88 (0.76–1.01) | 4 of 5 RCTs not entirely dedicated to septic patients |
| Patel et al. [ | 4190 | 16† | Albumin, crystalloids | All-cause mortality | RR 0.93 (0.86–1.01) | ~ 10 RCTs not entirely dedicated to septic patients |
| Rochwerg [ | 1238†† | 14 (2) | Albumin, crystalloids | All-cause mortality | NMA 0.83 (0.65–1.04) estimate | Only 2 RCTs with direct comparison and one multicentric subgroup analysis encompassing more than 98% |
RCT randomized control trials, OR odds ratio, RR relative risk, HES hydroxy ethyl starches, NMA nodal meta-analysis
*28- and 30-day mortality
**90-day mortality
†One EARSS from the reported conference proceedings
††Post hoc analyses: (1) ALBIOS trial patients (n = 1815) not included because Alb was not used as a resuscitation fluid; data incorporation did not affect the final results, (2) exclusion of data from the one trial encompassing less than 2% of patients did not affect the final results
Hemodynamic drug support and RCTs in septic shock
| Acronym | Studied drugs | Type of study | No. of patients ( | Primary outcome | Main results | Authors [ref.] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VASST | AVP versus NE | RCT, double blind, multicenter | 778 (396 vs. 382) | Mortality at day 28 | No difference; significantly lower mortality in patients with NE < 15 µg/min | Russell et al. [ |
| VASST (post hoc according to sepsis 3.0) | AVP versus NE | RCT, double blind, multicenter | 375 (193 vs. 182) | Mortality at day 28 | Significantly lower mortality in patients with lactate ≤ 2 mmol/L | Russell et al. [ |
| VANISH | AVP versus NE (subsequently HCT versus placebo) | 2 × 2 RCT, double blind, multicenter | 409 (104 vs. 103 vs. 101 vs. 101) | Kidney failure-free days until day 28 | No difference | Gordon et al. [ |
| VANC | AVP versus NE | RCT, double blind, single center | 300 (149 vs. 151) | Mortality and/or severe complications | Significantly less acute renal failure and atrial fibrillation | Hajjar et al. [ |
| SEPSIS-ACT | Selepressin versus NE | RCT, double blind, multicenter | 53 (32 vs. 21) | MAP > 65 mmHg without NE; NE dose | Significantly lower NE load, less net fluid intake, more ventilator-free days | Russell et al. [ |
| LeoPARDS | Levosimendan versus standard treatment alone | RCT, double blind, multicenter | 516 (259 vs. 257) | SOFA score up to day 28 | No difference; higher incidence in supraventricular tachyarrhythmia | Gordon et al. [ |
| ATHOS-3 | Angiotensin II versus NE | RCT, double blind, multicenter | 321 (163 vs. 158) | Target MAP > 75 mmHg at 3 h | Significantly more patients with target achieved; higher reduction in SOFA score at 48 h | Khanna et al. [ |
| nn | Esmolol versus conventional treatment | Open label, RCT, single center | 154 (77 vs. 77) | 80 < heart rate < 95 over 96 h | Significantly lower mortality at day 28 | Morelli et al. [ |
RCTs randomized clinical trials, NE norepinephrine, AVP arginine vasopressin, HCT hydrocortisone, nn no name
Hemodynamics in early septic shock
| Main questions | Actual recommendations* | Unanswered questions |
|---|---|---|
| Which MAP targets to stabilize the macrocirculation? | MAP ≥ 65 mmHg | What is the best timing for MAP intervention in sepsis? and until when? |
| How much fluid resuscitation and when? | From “time of presentation” or “time zero,” 30 mL/kg at least within 1 h | Should we prioritize fixed minimum fluid resuscitation or dynamic personalized reassessment of circulation status? |
| Which fluid(s)? | Crystalloids | Beyond balanced versus unbalanced crystalloid fluid selection, should we prefer acetate- or lactate-buffered solutions? |
| How long? | After the initial 1-h interventions, further fluid administration needs patients’ assessment for responsiveness | What “gauge for a filled tank”? |
| Which vasoactive (± inotropic) drug(s)? | NE is recommended as a 1st choice vasopressor. AVP or E can be added to help reaching the target (i.e., MAP) and spare NE | Within a “hour-1 bundle” strategy, should we trade-off less fluids and more vasoactive drugs to vice versa? |
| When? | Dobutamine only if target not reached after adequate fluid loading and use of vasoactive drugs | Are vasopressor combinations able to reach high MAP levels without detrimental cardiac side effects? |
| As early as during the initial fluid resuscitation period, to achieve the target MAP ≥ 65 mmHg ASAP | With NE as the currently recommended first-line vasopressor is “decatecholaminization” feasible and safe? |
MAP mean arterial pressure, NE norepinephrine, AVP arginine vasopressin, E epinephrine, ASAP as soon as possible
*According to the Surviving Sepsis Campaign 2016 and the 2018 update (Refs [3, 4])