| Literature DB >> 30701448 |
Thomas W L Scheeren1, Jan Bakker2,3,4,5, Daniel De Backer6, Djillali Annane7, Pierre Asfar8, E Christiaan Boerma9, Maurizio Cecconi10, Arnaldo Dubin11, Martin W Dünser12, Jacques Duranteau13, Anthony C Gordon14, Olfa Hamzaoui15, Glenn Hernández16, Marc Leone17, Bruno Levy18, Claude Martin17, Alexandre Mebazaa19, Xavier Monnet20,21, Andrea Morelli22, Didier Payen23, Rupert Pearse24, Michael R Pinsky25, Peter Radermacher26, Daniel Reuter27, Bernd Saugel28, Yasser Sakr29, Mervyn Singer30, Pierre Squara31, Antoine Vieillard-Baron32,33, Philippe Vignon34, Simon T Vistisen35, Iwan C C van der Horst36, Jean-Louis Vincent37, Jean-Louis Teboul38.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vasopressors are commonly applied to restore and maintain blood pressure in patients with sepsis. We aimed to evaluate the current practice and therapeutic goals regarding vasopressor use in septic shock as a basis for future studies and to provide some recommendations on their use.Entities:
Keywords: Arterial blood pressure; Norepinephrine; Resuscitation; Sepsis; Septic shock; Shock; Vasoactive agonists; Vasopressor
Year: 2019 PMID: 30701448 PMCID: PMC6353977 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-019-0498-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Baseline characteristics of survey respondents
| Response rate | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Europe | Outside Europe | |
| Valid respondents | 839 (100%) | 546 (65%) | 293 (35%) |
| Main specialty area | |||
| Intensive care | 545 (65%) | 313 (57%) | 232 (79%) |
| Anesthesiology | 197 (23%) | 164 (30%) | 33 (11%) |
| Internal medicine | 53 (6%) | 44 (8%) | 9 (3%) |
| Surgery | 8 (1%) | 3 (0.5%) | 5 (2%) |
| Other | 36 (4%) | 22 (4%) | 14 (5%) |
| Experience as intensivist | |||
| Full time > 5 years | 445 (53%) | 282 (52%) | 163 (56%) |
| Full time 2–5 years | 98 (12%) | 49 (9%) | 49 (17%) |
| Full time < 2 years | 46 (5%) | 26 (5%) | 20 (7%) |
| Part time intensivist | 141 (17%) | 116 (21%) | 25 (9%) |
| Not specialized (yet) | 108 (13%) | 73 (13%) | 35 (12%) |
| Type of institution | |||
| University hospital | 353 (42%) | 262 (48%) | 91 (31%) |
| Non-university public hospital | 183 (22%) | 149 (27%) | 34 (12%) |
| University affiliated hospital | 178 (21%) | 100 (18%) | 78 (27%) |
| Private hospital | 113 (13%) | 31 (6%) | 82 (28%) |
| Other | 12 (1%) | 4 (1%) | 8 (3%) |
| Type of ICU | |||
| Mixed ICU | 627 (75%) | 408 (75%) | 219 (75%) |
| Surgical ICU | 88 (10%) | 68 (12%) | 20 (7%) |
| Medical ICU | 83 (10%) | 50 (9%) | 33 (11%) |
| Other | 41 (5%) | 20 (4%) | 21 (7%) |
| Number of ICU beds | |||
| ≤ 5 | 23 (3%) | 16 (3%) | 7 (2%) |
| 6–10 | 221 (26%) | 176 (32%) | 45 (15%) |
| 11–15 | 188 (22%) | 135 (25%) | 53 (18%) |
| 16–20 | 150 (18%) | 89 (16%) | 61 (21%) |
| ≥ 20 | 257 (31%) | 130 (24%) | 127 (43%) |
| Number of patients admitted per year | |||
| < 500 | 188 (22%) | 135 (25%) | 53 (18%) |
| 500–1000 | 291 (35%) | 193 (35%) | 98 (33%) |
| 1001–1500 | 178 (21%) | 115 (21%) | 63 (22%) |
| 1501–2000 | 92 (11%) | 58 (11%) | 34 (12%) |
| > 2000 | 90 (11%) | 45 (8%) | 45 (15%) |
Survey questions and answers on vasopressor use in septic shock
| Respondents | |
|---|---|
| No (%) | |
| How do you measure arterial blood pressure in septic shock? | |
| Always invasively and continuously via an arterial line | 707 (84%) |
| Invasively only in case of severe shock | 97 (12%) |
| Mostly non-invasively and discontinuously (arm cuff) | 32 (4%) |
| Mostly non-invasively but continuously using applanation tonometry | 2 (0.3%) |
| Mostly non-invasively but continuously using finger cuff | 1 (0.1%) |
| What is your main triggering factor(s) for initiating a vasopressor in septic shock? | |
| A low diastolic blood pressure whatever the correction of hypovolemia | 29 (3%) |
| Insufficient cardiac output response to the initial fluid resuscitation | 56 (7%) |
| Insufficient central venous oxygen saturation response to the initial fluid resuscitation | 16 (2%) |
| Insufficient mean arterial pressure response to the initial fluid resuscitation | 700 (83%) |
| Other | 38 (5%) |
| What is your first line vasopressor in the treatment of hypotension? | |
| Adrenaline/epinephrine | 4 (0.5%) |
| Dopamine | 17 (2%) |
| Noradrenaline/norepinephrine | 816 (97%) |
| Vasopressin/terlipressin | 2 (0.3%) |
| Phenylephrine | 0 (0%) |
| When do you use your vasopressor? | |
| I try to avoid any use of vasopressors and stick to volume therapy | 15 (2%) |
| I use a vasopressor early, before complete volume resuscitation (despite preload dependency) | 104 (12%) |
| I use a vasopressor only after assessment of preload dependency | 371 (44%) |
| I use a vasopressor only after completed treatment of preload dependency | 228 (27%) |
| I use a vasopressor regardless of preload dependency | 121 (14%) |
| What is your main reason for increasing the dose of the vasopressor used? | |
| Diastolic arterial pressure target not reached | 13 (2%) |
| Mean arterial pressure target not reached | 568 (68%) |
| No arterial blood pressure response to the current dose | 63 (8%) |
| Signs of organ dysfunction despite reaching the arterial blood pressure target | 173 (21%) |
| Systolic arterial pressure target not reached | 22 (3%) |
| What is your arterial blood pressure target for vasopressor therapy? | |
| A diastolic blood pressure > 40 mmHg | 12 (1%) |
| A mean arterial pressure > 60–65 mmHg | 584 (70%) |
| A mean arterial pressure > 70–75 mmHg | 207 (25%) |
| A mean arterial pressure > 80–85 mmHg | 24 (3%) |
| A systolic blood pressure > 100 mmHg | 12 (1%) |
| Which patient’s factor(s) may encourage you to increase your arterial blood pressure target? | |
| Age | 14 (2%) |
| History of chronic hypertension | 662 (79%) |
| History of coronary artery disease | 52 (6%) |
| None of them | 102 (12%) |
| Value of central venous pressure | 9 (1%) |
| When the patient does not respond to your current vasopressor therapy, what is your main reason for adding another vasopressor agent to the current therapy? | |
| A pre-defined maximum dose of the 1st choice vasopressor has been reached | 119 (14%) |
| Although the pre-defined maximum dose of the 1st choice vasopressor has not been reached, previous increases in the dose of this vasopressor were ineffective | 135 (16%) |
| By adding a second vasopressor although the pre-defined maximum dose of the 1st choice vasopressor has not been reached, I want to limit/reduce the side-effects of the first vasopressor | 173 (21%) |
| I suppose that the mechanism of action of the first vasopressor is exhausted (e.g., adrenoceptors down regulation) and want to use a second one with an independent mechanism of action | 213 (25%) |
| I want to use synergistic effects of two different mechanisms of action | 199 (24%) |
| What is your main reason for reducing or stopping vasopressor therapy? | |
| Arterial blood pressure targets have been reached | 463 (55%) |
| I am concerned by potential side effects of current vasopressor therapy | 39 (5%) |
| Side effects of current vasopressor have occurred | 15 (2%) |
| The patient’s clinical situation is improving even if the arterial blood pressure target has not been reached | 296 (35%) |
| Vasopressor treatment is futile | 26 (3%) |
| Which of the following statements fits best your opinion on norepinephrine use in the treatment of shock? | |
| Restoring mean arterial pressure with norepinephrine is usually associated with a decrease in systemic blood flow | 69 (8%) |
| Restoring mean arterial pressure with norepinephrine is usually associated with a deterioration of renal function | 9 (1%) |
| Restoring mean arterial pressure with norepinephrine is usually associated with a reduction in microcirculatory blood flow and/or tissue oxygenation | 201 (24%) |
| Restoring mean arterial pressure with norepinephrine is usually associated with an increase in systemic blood flow | 442 (53%) |
| Restoring mean arterial pressure with norepinephrine is usually associated with no change in systemic blood flow | 118 (14%) |
Fig. 1RAND algorithm. Method used to define the degree of consensus and grades of recommendations of the experts’ recommendations
Questions to experts on vasopressor use
| 1. How should arterial blood pressure (ABP) be monitored in patients with septic shock? |
| 2. What is the ideal time to start vasopressor therapy in treating septic shock? |
| a. Should hypovolemia be completely corrected first? |
| b. Which variable do you consider most helpful in deciding when to start vasopressor treatment? |
| 3. Which vasopressor should be used as first choice? |
| a. Are there situations or patient categories in which a certain vasopressor should be preferred? |
| 4. What is your target? Which variable and which value? |
| 5. Concerning refractory hypotension [ |
| a. What is your definition of refractory hypotension? |
| b. Do you accept a lower MAP when it is not possible to achieve the target MAP with high-dose vasopressors? In which situations? |
| c. When should a second vasopressor agent be considered? Which one? |
| d. Should it replace or be added to the first-choice vasopressor? |
| e. Should corticosteroids be used to reach the target? |
| 6. What is your main reason for reducing or stopping vasopressor treatment? |
Fig. 2a Survey respondents from European countries. Number of survey respondents working in European countries. Black bars indicate high-income countries, and white bars lower-income countries. b Survey respondents from Non-European countries. Number of survey respondents working in Non-European countries. Black bars indicate high-income countries, and white bars lower-income countries
Summary of the expert’s recommendations and its degree of consensus and grade of recommendation
| Statement | Degree of consensus | Grade of recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Blood pressure monitoring | ||
| 1. In patients with shock, arterial blood pressure should be monitored invasively and continuously via an arterial catheter | Perfect | Strong |
| Ideal moment to start vasopressor therapy in treating circulatory shock | ||
| 2. Vasopressors should be started early, before (complete) completion of fluid resuscitation | Reasonable | Conditional |
| 3. MAP or the combination of MAP and DAP should be considered as trigger to start vasopressor treatment | Good | Strong |
| Vasopressor of first choice | ||
| 4. Norepinephrine should be used as vasopressor of first choice | Perfect | Strong |
| Target of vasopressor treatment | ||
| 5. The target of vasopressor therapy should be a MAP of 65 mmHg | Good | Strong |
| 6. Lower MAPs are tolerated in case of refractory hypotension despite adequate fluid and vasopressor treatment | Good | Strong |
| Treatment options in refractory hypotension | ||
| 7. Adding a second vasopressor in case of refractory hypotension | Good | Strong |
| 8. Using vasopressin or terlipressin as second vasopressor | Good | Strong |
| Reason to stop vasopressor treatment | ||
| 9. Vasopressor treatment should be reduced/stopped when the patient improves clinically, when side effects occur, or in case of ineffectiveness | Perfect | Strong |
| Use of steroids to reach target | ||
| 10. Steroids should be considered in septic shock | Good | Strong |
Definitions of degree of consensus and grades of recommendations based on the RAND algorithm. All 34 experts in agreement defined a perfect consensus and experts ≥ 80% agreement defined good consensus; both were considered as strong recommendation. Reasonable consensus was defined as 70–80% agreement among experts, and the recommendation was considered to be conditional