| Literature DB >> 32391156 |
Ofer Sadan1, Kai Singbartl2, Jacqueline Kraft1, Joao McONeil Plancher1, Alexander C M Greven3, Prem Kandiah1, Cederic Pimentel1, C L Hall1, Alexander Papangelou4, William H Asbury5, John J Hanfelt6, Owen Samuels1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent reports have demonstrated that among patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) treated with hypertonic NaCl, resultant hyperchloremia has been associated with the development of acute kidney injury (AKI). We report a trial comparing the effect of two hypertonic solutions with different chloride contents on the resultant serum chloride concentrations in SAH patients, with a primary outcome aimed at limiting chloride elevation.Entities:
Keywords: Acute kidney injury; Cerebral edema; Hyperchloremia; Hyperosmolar therapy; Neurocritical care; Subarachnoid hemorrhage
Year: 2020 PMID: 32391156 PMCID: PMC7197130 DOI: 10.1186/s40560-020-00449-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intensive Care ISSN: 2052-0492
Composition of the two hypertonic solutions compared in the trial
| NaCl (standard treatment) group | NaCl/Na-acetate (alternate treatment) group | |
|---|---|---|
| Solution components (per dose) | Sodium chloride | Sodium chloride and sodium acetate |
| Na Concentration [%] | 23.4 | 16.4 |
| NaCl pre-mixed solution, 4 mEq/ml [ml] | 30 | 20 |
| Na | 0 | 30 |
| Volume [ml] | 30 | 50 |
| Sodium content [mEq/dose] | 120 | 140 |
| Chloride content [mEq/dose] | 120 | 80 |
| Acetate content [mEq/dose] | 0 | 60 |
Fig. 1Patient allocation scheme. aAs per the protocol, consent was obtained within 48 h of admission, when symptoms began within a day of admission. In cases where the symptom onset was unclear, patients were excluded. bDuring the study there was national shortage of Na-acetate solution, which led to a temporary delay in recruitment. LAR, legally authorized representative
Demographic information of the study cohort. There were no statistically significant differences between the two randomized groups in terms of the various clinical parameters. Results are presented as percentage with 95% confidence interval. H&H Hunt and Hess, SOFA sequential organ failure assessment score, HTN hypertension, DM diabetes mellitus, CKD chronic kidney disease
| Parameter | All ( | Non-randomized ( | NaCl ( | NaCl/Na-acetate ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 53.4 + 13.4 | 53.2 + 14.1 | 56.3 + 13.4 | 51.4 + 13.7 |
| Gender (% female) | 76.3% [64.3–85.7] | 59.2% [40.6–76.1] | 80% [55.6–94] | 100% |
| H&H 1–2 | 44.1% [31.2–57.6] | 66.7% [46.0–83.5] | 20.0% [6.0–44.4] | 29.4% [12.2–53.0] |
| H&H 3 | 39.0% [26.5–52.6] | 29.6% [15.1–48.2] | 66.7% [41.6–86.0] | 29.4% [12.2–53.0] |
| H&H 4 | 15.3% [7.8–26.0] | 3.7% [0.4–16.0] | 13.3% [2.9–36.3] | 35.3% [16.3–58.9] |
| H&H 5 | 1.7% [0.2–7.6] | 0% | 5.9% [0.6–24.4] | |
| GCS on admit (median + IQR) | 14 [11–15] | 15 [13.5–15] | 14 [7–15] | 13 [7–15] |
| SOFA score on admit (median ± IQR) | 1 [0–3] | 1 [0–2] | 2 [1–4.5] | 2 [1–3] |
| HTN | 47.5% [34.3–60.9] | 40.7% [23.9–59.4] | 53.3% [29.4–76.1] | 52.9% [30.3–74.6] |
| CAD | 6.8% [1.9–16.5] | 3.7% [0.4–16.0] | 13.3% [2.9–36.3] | 5.9% [0.6–24.4] |
| DM | 11.9% [4.9–22.9] | 11.1% [3.2–26.8] | 13.3% [2.9–36.3] | 11.8% [2.5–32.7] |
| Smoker | 47.5% [34.3–60.9] | 55.6% [37.1–72.9] | 40.0% [18.8–64.7] | 41.2% [20.7–64.4] |
| CKD | 1.7% [0.0–9.1] | 0% | 6.7% [0.7–27.2] | 0% |
| EtOH abuse | 10.2% [3.8–20.8] | 14.8% [5.2–31.5] | 6.7% [0.7–27.2] | 5.9% [0.6–24.4] |
| Illicit drug use | 25.4% [15.0–38.4] | 29.6% [15.1–48.2] | 6.7% [0.7–27.2] | 35.3% [16.3–58.9] |
| First creatinine (mean ± SD) | 0.80 + 0.31 | 0.82 + 0.27 | 0.79 + 0.26 | 0.76 + 0.42 |
| Surgical approach to the aneurysm (% treated with endovascular approach) | 69.5% [57..0–80.1] | 81.5% [64.1–92.6] | 66.7% [41.6–86.0] | 52.9% [30.3–74.6] |
Fig. 2The effect of hypertonic solution content on serum electrolytes. a ∆ Chloride between time of randomization and the highest recorded value post randomization during the ICU stay was marginally lower in the NaCl/Na-acetate group, yet not statistically significant. b ∆ Sodium between time of randomization and the highest value post randomization during ICU stay was marginally higher in the NaCl/Na-acetate group, yet not in a statistically significant manner. c ∆ creatinine was similar between the groups. d ∆ Bicarbonate (HCO3) was higher in the NaCl/Na-acetate group in a statistically significant manner. e Change in sodium pre- and post-dose was higher in the NaCl/Na-acetate group. f Reduction in ICP was similar between the groups at 20 and 60 min post-administration. *p < 0.05
Fig. 3The effect of hypertonic solution on renal function and ICP reduction. a The rate of AKI was lower in the NaCl/Na-acetate group as compared with the NaCl group in an intention to treat analysis. b Comparison of Na+/Cl− loads with the study intervention doses, post-randomization. c Histogram of AKI frequency by group of treatment and hospitalization day. *p < 0.05. AKI, acute kidney injury; KDIGO, Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes grading for AKI
Binary logistic regression correlating between clinical parameters and AKI (*p < 0.05)
| Parameter | OR [CI 95%] |
|---|---|
| Age | 0.97 [0.92–1.03] |
| Gender | 5.25 [0.42–66.22] |
| Hypertension | 0.83 [0.19–3.72] |
| Diabetes mellitus | 0.70 [0.06–7.74] |
| Coronary artery disease | 1.11 [0.09–13.89] |
| Aneurysm treatment approach | 0.51 [0.11–2.53] |
| Treatment with NaCl/Na-acetate* | 0.18 [0.02–0.70] |
| ∆ Chloride* | 1.32 [1.04–1.67] |
| ∆ Sodium | 1.03 [0.91–1.17] |
| Chloride load post randomization | 1.00 [1.00–1.00] |
| Sodium load post randomization | 1.00 [1.00–1.00] |
Fig. 4Change in urine AKI biomarkers along the first 10 days of admission. a–d Change in biomarker concentration between the different treatment groups (non-randomized, randomized to receive NaCl 23.4% and randomized to receive NaCl/Na-acetate 16.4%). The first time point is days 2–3, which was the day of consent, which was either admission day 2 or 3. *p < 0.05 between the groups. AKI, acute kidney injury