| Literature DB >> 30961544 |
Yong Liu1,2,3, Daqing Hong4, Amanda Ying Wang5, Rui Guo6, Brendan Smyth3, Jin Liu1,2, Guoli Sun1,2, Shiqun Chen1,2, Ning Tan1,2, Meg Jardine3, David Brieger3, Ahmed Shaman3,7, Shariful Islam3, Jiyan Chen8,9, Martin Gallagher10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The role of intravenous hydration at the time of primary percutaneous intervention (PCI) for ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) remains unclear. Guidelines are vague, supported by low level evidence, and hydration is used less often than other clinical settings.To perform a systematic review and meta-analysis of all randomized controlled trials assessing intravenous hydration compared with non-hydration for prevention of contrast induced nephropathy (CIN) and In-hospital mortality in patients with STEMI undergoing primary PCI.Entities:
Keywords: Contrast-induced nephropathy; Intravenous hydration; Primary percutaneous coronary intervention, acute kidney injury, dialysis, mortality; ST-segment elevation-myocardial infarction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30961544 PMCID: PMC6454772 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-019-1054-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Fig. 1Study flow diagram of study selection
Baseline characteristics of included studies
| Study | Country, recruitment period | No. of patients randomized | Age ±SD/ (range) | Killip class > 1 | eGFR | Intervention Arm | Delivered hydration in intervention groupa | CIN (%) | RRT(%) | In-hospital mortality (%) | HF /APE | Mean LOS (intervention; control) (days) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maioli et.al.(2011) | Italy, July 2004–December 2008 | 461 | 65.0 ± 12.34 | 20.6% (93/450) | 75.67 ± 21.71 | Biocarbonate Solution: | Mean volume: 1021 ± 196 ml | 20.6%(93/450) | 0.9% (4/450) | 3.5% (16/450) | Unknown | Unknown |
| Luo et.al.(2014) | China, August 2009–October 2012 | 216 | 67.0 (57–75) | 35.6% (77/216) | 70.55 ± 22.90 | Normal Saline: | Mean rate: 0.75 ml/kg/hour | 27.8% (60/216) | 3.7% (8/216) | 6% (13/216) | 6% (13/216) | 6.8 ± 25.7; 14.4 ± 30.5 |
| Jurado-Román et.al.(2015) | Spain, July 2012–November 2013 | 408 | 62.8 ± 13.04 | 14.7% (60/408) | 89 ± 40.97 | Normal Saline: | Mean volume: 1720 ± 234 ml | 14%(57/408) | 1% | 4.81%(15/312) | Unknown | 6; 8.2 |
ER emergency room, RRT Requirement for dialysis, HF heart failure, APE Acute pulmonary edema, LOS Length of stay. Other abbreviations as in study design
aNo paper reported hydration volume or rate in the control group
Fig. 2Risk of bias graph: ach risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies
Fig. 3a. Effects of intravenous hydration lowering on risk of contrast-induced nephropathy (Hydration vs. No hydration, using random effects model) The event rate in different study arms is presented alongside the computed risk ratio (95% confidence interval [CI] (lower and upper limit) with p value. Forest plot shows effect size (solid squares) with 95% CI (black line through the solid squares), in terms of risk ratio for individual studies and pooled risk ratio (open diamonds) for random effects model at the bottom. Studies favouring reduction of risk with isotonic hydration are on the left of the centre line, and studies favouring control arm are on right of the centre line. b. Effects of intravenous saline hydration lowering on risk of contrast-induced nephropathy (Saline vs. No hydration) The event rate in different study arms is presented alongside the computed risk ratio (95% confidence interval [CI] (lower and upper limit) with p value. Forest plot shows effect size (solid squares) with 95% CI (black line through the solid squares), in terms of risk ratio for individual studies and pooled risk ratio (open diamonds) for random effects model at the bottom. Studies favouring reduction of risk with normal saline hydration are on the left of the centre line, and studies favouring control arm are on right of the centre line
Fig. 4Effects of intravenous hydration lowering on risk of in-hospital requirement for dialysis (Hydration vs. No hydration)
Fig. 5Effects of intravenous hydration lowering on risk of in-hospital all-cause mortality (Hydration vs. No hydration)