| Literature DB >> 35541286 |
Maurizio Bertaina1, Alessandro Galluzzo2, Nuccia Morici3,4, Alice Sacco3, Fabrizio Oliva3, Serafina Valente5, Fabrizio D'Ascenzo6, Simone Frea6, Pierluigi Sbarra1, Elisabetta Petitti1, Silvia Brach Prever1, Giacomo Boccuzzi1, Paola Zanini1, Matteo Attisani7, Francesco Rametta2, Gaetano Maria De Ferrari6, Patrizia Noussan1, Mario Iannaccone1.
Abstract
Cardiogenic shock represents one of the most dramatic scenarios to deal with in intensive cardiology care and is burdened by substantial short-term mortality. An integrated approach, including timely diagnosis and phenotyping, along with a well-established shock team and management protocol, may improve survival. The use of the Swan-Ganz catheter could play a pivotal role in various phases of cardiogenic shock management, encompassing diagnosis and haemodynamic characterisation to treatment selection, titration and weaning. Moreover, it is essential in the evaluation of patients who might be candidates for long-term heart-replacement strategies. This review provides a historical background on the use of the Swan-Ganz catheter in the intensive care unit and an analysis of the available evidence in terms of potential prognostic implications in this setting.Entities:
Keywords: Swan-Ganz catheter; cardiogenic shock; invasive monitoring; pulmonary artery catheter; review
Year: 2022 PMID: 35541286 PMCID: PMC9069264 DOI: 10.15420/cfr.2021.32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Card Fail Rev ISSN: 2057-7540
Studies Evaluating Association Between Pulmonary Artery Catheter Use and Short-term Outcomes in Cardiogenic Shock Patients
| Study | Study Design | Enrolment Period | Included Population | n | CS Aetiology | MCS Use | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ranka et al. 2021[ | Retrospective data from the Nationwide Readmissions Database US registry | January 2016–November 2017 | ICD-9-CM codes corresponding to CS diagnosis. | 23,6156 (9.6% RHC) | MI 44.1% | IABP 16.3% | In-hospital propensity-matched mortality PAC 25.8% versus no-PAC 33.1% (adjusted OR 0.69; 95% CI [0.66–0.72]; p<0.001) |
| Garan et al. 2020[ | Retrospective data from the first eight sites contributing to the Cardiogenic Shock Working Group registry in the US | 2016–2019 | CS definition: sustained episode of SBP <90 mmHg for at least 30 min or use of vasoactive agents and/or cardiac index <2.2 l/min/m2 determined to be secondary to cardiac dysfunction, in the absence of hypovolaemia; or use of an MCS device for clinically suspected CS | 858 (69.7% complete PAC) | MI 34.9% | IABP 54.5% | In-hospital mortality complete PAC assessment 25% versus no-PAC 33.8% (adjusted OR 0.64; 95% CI [0.43–0.94]) |
| Hernandez et al. 2019[ | Retrospective data from the National Inpatient Sample database in the US | 2004–2014 | ICD-9-CM codes corresponding to HF and CS diagnosis. | 91,5416 | Not specified | MCS (not further specified) 26.2% | In-hospital propensity-matched mortality PAC 34.9% versus no-PAC 37% (adjusted OR 0.91; 95% CI [0.87–0.97]; p=0.001) |
| Sionis et al. 2019[ | Subanalysis of the prospective European CardShock study | October 2010–December 2012 | Consecutive patients ≥18 years old within 6 hours from identification of CS, defined as evidence of an acute cardiac cause and: SBP <90 mmHg for 30 min or need for vasopressor therapy to maintain SBP >90 mmHg; symptoms and/or signs of systemic and/or pulmonary congestion; and symptoms and/or signs of hypoperfusion | 219 | MI 80.8% | IABP 55.7% | 30-day mortality PAC 42% versus no-PAC 24% (p=0.2) |
| O'Neill et al. 2018[ | Subanalysis of the Impella IQ US prospective registry | 2009–2016 | AMICS defined as SBP <90 mmHg, or need for vasopressors to maintain SBP >90 mmHg, in the setting of prolonged chest discomfort and associated with ST segment elevation, new left bundle branch block, or ST T-wave changes compatible with non-ST-elevation MI | 13,984 (37.3% PAC) | MI 100% | Impella 100% | Mortality before explantation |
| Rossello et al. 2017[ | Prospective cohort investigation of a single-centre Spanish ICCU | December 2005–May 2009 | All consecutive patients presenting with a first admission of CS, defined as: SBP <90 mmHg for 30 min or the need for vasopressor therapy to maintain adequate perfusion pressure and signs of hypoperfusion | 129 | MI 50% | IABP 32% | 30-day mortality with PAC 55% versus no PAC 78% (p=0.010; adjusted HR 0.55; 95% CI [0.35–0.86]; p=0.008) |
AMICS = acute MI cardiogenic shock; CMP = cardiomyopathy; CS = cardiogenic shock; ECMO = extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; ELS = extracorporeal life support; HF = heart failure; IABP = Intra-aortic balloon pump; ICCU: Intensive Cardiac Care Unit; ICD-9-CM = ICD-9 Clinical Modification; LVAD = left ventricular assist device; MCS = mechanical circulatory support; PAC = pulmonary artery catheter; RHC = right heart catheterisation; SBP = systolic blood pressure; VAD = ventricular assist device.