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Mortality risk over time after early fluid resuscitation in African children

BACKGROUND: African children hospitalised with severe febrile illness have a high risk of mortality. The Fluid Expansion As Supportive Therapy (FEAST) trial (ISCRTN 69856593) demonstrated increased mortality risk associated with fluid boluses, but the temporal relationship to bolus therapy and under...

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Autores principales: George, Elizabeth C., Kiguli, Sarah, Olupot, Peter Olupot, Opoka, Robert O., Engoru, Charles, Akech, Samuel O., Nyeko, Richard, Mtove, George, Mpoya, Ayub, Thomason, Margaret J., Crawley, Jane, Evans, Jennifer A., Gibb, Diana M., Babiker, Abdel G., Maitland, Kathryn, Walker, A. Sarah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6882199/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31775837
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13054-019-2619-y
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author George, Elizabeth C.
Kiguli, Sarah
Olupot, Peter Olupot
Opoka, Robert O.
Engoru, Charles
Akech, Samuel O.
Nyeko, Richard
Mtove, George
Mpoya, Ayub
Thomason, Margaret J.
Crawley, Jane
Evans, Jennifer A.
Gibb, Diana M.
Babiker, Abdel G.
Maitland, Kathryn
Walker, A. Sarah
author_facet George, Elizabeth C.
Kiguli, Sarah
Olupot, Peter Olupot
Opoka, Robert O.
Engoru, Charles
Akech, Samuel O.
Nyeko, Richard
Mtove, George
Mpoya, Ayub
Thomason, Margaret J.
Crawley, Jane
Evans, Jennifer A.
Gibb, Diana M.
Babiker, Abdel G.
Maitland, Kathryn
Walker, A. Sarah
author_sort George, Elizabeth C.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: African children hospitalised with severe febrile illness have a high risk of mortality. The Fluid Expansion As Supportive Therapy (FEAST) trial (ISCRTN 69856593) demonstrated increased mortality risk associated with fluid boluses, but the temporal relationship to bolus therapy and underlying mechanism remains unclear. METHODS: In a post hoc retrospective analysis, flexible parametric models were used to compare change in mortality risk post-randomisation in children allocated to bolus therapy with 20–40 ml/kg 5% albumin or 0.9% saline over 1–2 h or no bolus (control, 4 ml/kg/hour maintenance), overall and for different terminal clinical events (cardiogenic, neurological, respiratory, or unknown/other). RESULTS: Two thousand ninety-seven and 1041 children were randomised to bolus vs no bolus, of whom 254 (12%) and 91 (9%) respectively died within 28 days. Median (IQR) bolus fluid in the bolus groups received by 4 h was 20 (20, 40) ml/kg and was the same at 8 h; total fluids received in bolus groups at 4 h and 8 h were 38 (28, 43) ml/kg and 40 (30, 50) ml/kg, respectively. Total fluid volumes received in the control group by 4 h and 8 h were median (IQR) 10 (6, 15) ml/kg and 10 (10, 26) ml/kg, respectively. Mortality risk was greatest 30 min post-randomisation in both groups, declining sharply to 4 h and then more slowly to 28 days. Maximum mortality risk was similar in bolus and no bolus groups; however, the risk declined more slowly in the bolus group, with significantly higher mortality risk compared to the no bolus group from 1.6 to 101 h (4 days) post-randomisation. The delay in decline in mortality risk in the bolus groups was most pronounced for cardiogenic modes of death. CONCLUSIONS: The increased risk from bolus therapy was not due to a mechanism occurring immediately after bolus administration. Excess mortality risk in the bolus group resulted from slower decrease in mortality risk over the ensuing 4 days. Thus, administration of modest bolus volumes appeared to prevent mortality risk declining at the same rate that it would have done without a bolus, rather than harm associated with bolus resulting from a concurrent increased risk of death peri-bolus administration. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN69856593. Date of registration 15 December 2008.
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spelling pubmed-68821992019-12-03 Mortality risk over time after early fluid resuscitation in African children George, Elizabeth C. Kiguli, Sarah Olupot, Peter Olupot Opoka, Robert O. Engoru, Charles Akech, Samuel O. Nyeko, Richard Mtove, George Mpoya, Ayub Thomason, Margaret J. Crawley, Jane Evans, Jennifer A. Gibb, Diana M. Babiker, Abdel G. Maitland, Kathryn Walker, A. Sarah Crit Care Research BACKGROUND: African children hospitalised with severe febrile illness have a high risk of mortality. The Fluid Expansion As Supportive Therapy (FEAST) trial (ISCRTN 69856593) demonstrated increased mortality risk associated with fluid boluses, but the temporal relationship to bolus therapy and underlying mechanism remains unclear. METHODS: In a post hoc retrospective analysis, flexible parametric models were used to compare change in mortality risk post-randomisation in children allocated to bolus therapy with 20–40 ml/kg 5% albumin or 0.9% saline over 1–2 h or no bolus (control, 4 ml/kg/hour maintenance), overall and for different terminal clinical events (cardiogenic, neurological, respiratory, or unknown/other). RESULTS: Two thousand ninety-seven and 1041 children were randomised to bolus vs no bolus, of whom 254 (12%) and 91 (9%) respectively died within 28 days. Median (IQR) bolus fluid in the bolus groups received by 4 h was 20 (20, 40) ml/kg and was the same at 8 h; total fluids received in bolus groups at 4 h and 8 h were 38 (28, 43) ml/kg and 40 (30, 50) ml/kg, respectively. Total fluid volumes received in the control group by 4 h and 8 h were median (IQR) 10 (6, 15) ml/kg and 10 (10, 26) ml/kg, respectively. Mortality risk was greatest 30 min post-randomisation in both groups, declining sharply to 4 h and then more slowly to 28 days. Maximum mortality risk was similar in bolus and no bolus groups; however, the risk declined more slowly in the bolus group, with significantly higher mortality risk compared to the no bolus group from 1.6 to 101 h (4 days) post-randomisation. The delay in decline in mortality risk in the bolus groups was most pronounced for cardiogenic modes of death. CONCLUSIONS: The increased risk from bolus therapy was not due to a mechanism occurring immediately after bolus administration. Excess mortality risk in the bolus group resulted from slower decrease in mortality risk over the ensuing 4 days. Thus, administration of modest bolus volumes appeared to prevent mortality risk declining at the same rate that it would have done without a bolus, rather than harm associated with bolus resulting from a concurrent increased risk of death peri-bolus administration. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN69856593. Date of registration 15 December 2008. BioMed Central 2019-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6882199/ /pubmed/31775837 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13054-019-2619-y Text en © The Author(s). 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
George, Elizabeth C.
Kiguli, Sarah
Olupot, Peter Olupot
Opoka, Robert O.
Engoru, Charles
Akech, Samuel O.
Nyeko, Richard
Mtove, George
Mpoya, Ayub
Thomason, Margaret J.
Crawley, Jane
Evans, Jennifer A.
Gibb, Diana M.
Babiker, Abdel G.
Maitland, Kathryn
Walker, A. Sarah
Mortality risk over time after early fluid resuscitation in African children
title Mortality risk over time after early fluid resuscitation in African children
title_full Mortality risk over time after early fluid resuscitation in African children
title_fullStr Mortality risk over time after early fluid resuscitation in African children
title_full_unstemmed Mortality risk over time after early fluid resuscitation in African children
title_short Mortality risk over time after early fluid resuscitation in African children
title_sort mortality risk over time after early fluid resuscitation in african children
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6882199/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31775837
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13054-019-2619-y
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