| Literature DB >> 33204139 |
Elaine M Kaptein1, Alan Cantillep1, John S Kaptein1, Zayar Oo1, Myint B Thu1, Phyu Phyu Thwe1, Matthew J Kaptein1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Accurate assessment of relative intravascular volume is critical for appropriate volume management of patients with kidney disease. Respiratory variations of inferior vena cava (IVC) diameter have been used and may correlate with those of subclavian vein (SCV) by bedside ultrasound. The purpose of this study was to assess the relationship between SCV and IVC respiratory variations by bedside ultrasound in a large group of hospitalized patients with acute and/or chronic kidney disease.Entities:
Keywords: acute kidney injury; chronic kidney disease; end-stage kidney disease; hospitalized patients; inferior vena cava ultrasound; intravascular volume assessment; point-of-care ultrasound; subclavian vein ultrasound; venous collapsibility index
Year: 2020 PMID: 33204139 PMCID: PMC7667589 DOI: 10.2147/IJNRD.S280458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nephrol Renovasc Dis ISSN: 1178-7058
Clinical Characteristics of Patients and Encounters
| Individual Patient Characteristics | Longitudinal View SCV CI with IVC CI (n=68) (%) | Transverse View SCV CI with IVC CI (n=34) (%) | P values LLR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (median, range) years | 55 (31–85) | 54 (26–89) | 0.704& |
| Gender (male) | 47 (69) | 27 (79) | 0.264 |
| Hospital survival | 52 (76) | 15 (44) | 0.0013 |
| 0.065 | |||
| AKD | 22 (32) | 15 (44) | |
| AKD on CKD | 13 (19) | 8 (24) | |
| CKD | 3 (4) | 1 (3) | |
| ESKD on HD | 26 (38) | 8 (24) | |
| ESKD on PD | 4 (6) | 0 (0) | |
| Other | 0 (0) | 2 (6) | |
| Infection/sepsis/septic shock | 35 (51) | 14 (41) | 0.326 |
| Respiratory failure | 27 (40) | 16 (47) | 0.479 |
| Bleeding | 8 (12) | 4 (12) | 1.000 |
| Cardiac disease | 15 (22) | 6 (18) | 0.600 |
| Hepatitis/shock liver | 9 (13) | 3 (9) | 0.505 |
| HTN | 35 (51) | 14 (41) | 0.326 |
| DM | 38 (56) | 13 (38) | 0.092 |
| Cardiac disorders | 29 (43) | 15 (44) | 0.888 |
| Cirrhosis/liver failure | 10 (15) | 8 (24) | 0.279 |
| Morbid obesity | 4 (6) | 1 (3) | 0.499 |
| Anterior abdominal surgery | 2 (3) | 0 (0) | 0.200 |
| Intra-abdominal hypertension* | 0 (0) | 1 (3) | 0.137 |
| ICU location | 84 (69) | 36 (92) | 0.0017 |
| Ventilatory support | 44 (36) | 21 (54) | 0.055 |
Notes: Contingency tables were analyzed using log likelihood ratio tests; ages of the two cohorts were compared using t-test assuming unequal variance. &t-test assuming unequal variances. *Intra-abdominal hypertension (bladder pressure > 20 mmHg).
Abbreviations: AKD, acute kidney disease; CKD, chronic kidney disease; DM, diabetes mellitus; ESKD, end-stage kidney disease; HD, hemodialysis; HTN, hypertension; ICU, intensive care unit; IVC CI, inferior venal cava collapsibility; PD, peritoneal dialysis; SCV CI, subclavian vein collapsibility; LLR, log likelihood ratio.
Figure 1Relationship of paired SCV CI to IVC CI values for encounters determined for all data (A), and different subgroups including transverse versus longitudinal SCV views (B), ventilated versus non-ventilated encounters (C), no central venous (CV) access versus CV access versus arterio-venous fistula (AVF) versus other* (peritoneal dialysis access (n=6) or femoral access (n=2)) (D), and AKD versus AKD on CKD versus ESKD (E). The IVC CI cut-offs of 20% and 50% are indicated by vertical-dotted lines.
Figure 2Sensitivity and specificity plots for various SCV CI cut-offs as predictors for whether IVC CI is <20% or >50% for spontaneous breathing and ventilated encounters. Solid circles are sensitivity and open circles are specificity. The solid lines are the sigmoidal fit to the data constrained to maximum and minimum sensitivities and specificities of 100% and 0%, respectively. The SCV CI cut-off at which the sensitivity and specificity are equal is indicated by the vertical lines. Sensitivity and specificity plots for various SCV CI cut-offs as predictors for whether IVC CI is <20% for spontaneous breathing encounters (A), <20% for mechanically ventilated encounters (B), >50% for spontaneous breathing encounters (C), >50% for mechanically ventilated encounters (D). Sensitivity and specificity plots for various SCV CI cut-offs from data derived from published reports, as predictors for whether IVC CI is <20% for spontaneous breathing encounters for medical patients (Munir et al16) (E), <20% for spontaneous breathing and mechanically ventilated encounters for surgical ICU patients (Kent et al13) (F), >50% for spontaneous breathing encounters for medical patients (Munir et al16) (G), and >50% for a combination of spontaneous breathing and mechanically ventilated encounters for surgical ICU patients (Kent et al13) (H). For the data from Munir et al,16 collapsibility index ((max-min)/max) *100% was derived from (1-the ratio of min/max) for both SCV CI and IVC CI.
Relationship of Subclavian Vein to Inferior Vena Cava Data for Our Study, and Comparison to Data Derived from Previous Studies
| Author/Year | Kaptein (Current study) | gMunir (2007) | gMunir (2007) | gKent (2013) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient population | Medical with acute and/or chronic kidney disease | Medical requiring echocardiography | Surgical ICU | ||||||
| Respiratory status | Spontaneous breathing | Mechanical ventilation | Spontaneous breathing | Spontaneous breathing | Mixed Spontaneous breathing and Mechanical ventilation | ||||
| Patient position for SCV & IVC US | 30 to 45 degrees (Subclavicular) | 30 to 45 degrees (Subclavicular) | IVC flat/SCV 45 degrees (Supraclavicular) | IVC flat/SCV flat (Supraclavicular) | Not specified (Subclavicular) | ||||
| Correlation of SCV CI to IVC CI | 0.67 (n=95)a | 0.75 (n=65)a,c | 0.69 (n=39)a | 0.34 (n=39)b | 0.78 (n=94)a | ||||
| SCV CI cut-offs (%) and (95% confidence limits) at maximal Sensitivity and Specificity | |||||||||
| IVC CI hypervolemia cut-off (%) (IVC CI<20%) | 22 (21 to 23)e | 22 (21 to 23)e | 32d (30 to 34)e | N/A | 23 (23 to 24)e | ||||
| IVC CI hypovolemia cut-off (IVC CI>50%) | 39 (37 to 41)e | 39 (38 to 40)e | 39 (37 to 40)e | N/A | 40 (40 to 41)e | ||||
| SN/SP (%) | 74 (72 to 75)e | 70 (69 to 73)e | 88 (86 to 89)e | 91 (89 to 93)e | 81 (77 to 85)e | 82 (80 to 85)e | N/A | 81 (80 to 82)e | 85 (84 to 89)e |
| AUC (area±SD) | 0.828±0.043f | 0.739±0.058f | 0.917±0.037f | 0.925±0.032f | 0.826±0.078f | 0.871±0.058f | N/A | 0.878±0.035f | 0.924±0.035f |
| Concordance of IVC CI assessment to SCV CI assessment | Hypervolemia/not hypervolemia | Hypovolemia/not hypovolemia | Hypervolemia/not hypervolemia | Hypovolemia/not hypovolemia | Hypervolemia/not hypervolemia | Hypovolemia/not hypovolemia | N/A | Hypervolemia/not hypervolemia | Hypovolemia/not hypovolemia |
| Concordance (%) | 72 | 71 | 85 | 89 | 77 | 82 | N/A | 77 | 84 |
| PPV (%) | 53 | 39 | 86 | 67 | 68 | 72 | N/A | 74 | 30 |
| NPV (%) | 84 | 90 | 83 | 98 | 85 | 91 | N/A | 80 | 99 |
| + LR | 2.5 | 2.4 | 5.0 | 8.0 | 3.1 | 4.2 | N/A | 3.1 | 5.1 |
| - LR | 0.43 | 0.42 | 0.17 | 0.09 | 0.25 | 0.17 | N/A | 0.27 | 0.17 |
Notes: aP<0.001and bP<0.05indicates the significance of the correlation (R). cP=0.32 comparing correlation (R) values for spontaneous breathing encounters with mechanically ventilated encounters for our data. dCut-off may vary from that of the other two studies due to widely scattered and small data set (Figure 2E). The right SCV was imaged from the supraclavicular approach with the probe positioned above the medial end of the clavicle in the fossa between the sternal and the clavicular heads of the sternocleidomastoid muscle.16 e95% confidence interval. fP <0.001 testing whether AUC is =0.5. gData were extracted and transformed from published figures. For the data from Munir et al,16 collapsibility index ((max-min)/max) was derived from (1-the ratio of min/max) for both SCV CI and IVC CI. +LR is likelihood of a positive result for a positive patient/likelihood of a positive result for negative patient eg for a +LR >5.0, a positive result is 5 times more likely to be a true positive rather than a false positive. -LR is similar, eg for a –LLR <0.2, a negative result is 5 times more likely to be a true negative rather than a false negative. (is 0.2 times as likely to be a positive patient than a negative patient). +LR and –LR are independent of prevalence (ie distribution of the data) whereas PPV and NPV (positive predictive value and negative predictive value; fraction of positive/negative predictions that are correct) are affected by prevalence. DI and CI are mathematical transformations of each other as follows: DI =CI/(100%-CI) * 100%; CI=DI/(100%+DI) * 100%. Thus, an IVC CI cut-off of <20% for hypervolemia with spontaneous breathing and mechanical ventilation corresponds to an IVC DI cut-off of <25% and an IVC CI cut-off of >50% for hypovolemia in both spontaneous breathing and mechanical ventilation encounters corresponds to an IVC DI cut-off of >100%. An SCV CI cut-off of <22% corresponds to an SCV DI cut-off of <28% for predicting hypervolemia and SCV CI cut-off of >39% corresponds to a SCV DI cut-off of >64% for predicting hypovolemia.
Abbreviations: AUC, area under the curve expressed as a fraction of the total area; CI, collapsibility index; ICU, intensive care unit; IVC, inferior vena cava; LR, likelihood ratio; NPV, negative predictive value; PPV, positive predictive value; SCV, subclavian vein; SN, sensitivities; SP, specificities; US, ultrasound.