• Intensive care medicine · Sep 2024

    Fluid responsiveness in acute respiratory distress syndrome patients: a post hoc analysis of the HEMOPRED study.

    • Adrien Joseph, Bruno Evrard, Matthieu Petit, Marine Goudelin, Gwenaël Prat, Michel Slama, Cyril Charron, Philippe Vignon, and Antoine Vieillard-Baron.
    • Medical and Surgical intensive care unit, University Hospital Ambroise Paré, GHU Paris-Saclay, Assistance Publique Hôpitaux de Paris, Boulogne-Billancourt, France. adrien.joseph@aphp.fr.
    • Intensive Care Med. 2024 Sep 10.

    PurposeOptimal fluid management in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is challenging due to risks associated with both circulatory failure and fluid overload. The performance of dynamic indices to predict fluid responsiveness (FR) in ARDS patients is uncertain.MethodsThis post hoc analysis of the HEMOPRED study compared the performance of dynamic indices in mechanically ventilated patients with shock, with and without ARDS, to predict FR, defined as an increase in aortic velocity time integral (VTI)  > 10% after passive leg raising (PLR).ResultsAmong 540 patients, 117 (22%) had ARDS and were ventilated with a median tidal volume of 7.6 mL/kg [6.9-8.4] and a median positive end-expiratory pressure of 7 cmH2O [5-9]. FR was observed in 45 ARDS patients (39% vs 44% in non-ARDS patients, p = 0.384). Reliability of dynamic indices to predict FR remained consistent in ARDS patients, though with different thresholds. Collapsibility index of the superior vena cava (ΔSVC) showed the best predictive performance in both ARDS (area under the curve [AUC] = 0.763 [0.659-0.868]) and non-ARDS (AUC = 0.750 [0.698-0.802]) patients. A right to left ventricle end-diastolic area ratio  > 0.8 or paradoxical septal motion were strongly linked to the absence of FR (> 80% specificity). FR was not associated with intensive care unit (ICU) mortality (47% vs. 46%, p = 1). However, hypovolemia, defined as an aortic VTI increase  > 32% during PLR (median increase in patients with a partial SVC collapse) was independently associated with ICU mortality (odds ratio [OR] = 1.355 [1.077-1.705], p = 0.011), as well as pulse pressure variation (OR = 1.014 [1.001-1.026], p = 0.034).ConclusionPerformance of dynamic indices to predict FR appears preserved in ARDS patients, albeit with distinct thresholds. Hypovolemia, indicated by a  > 32% increase in aortic VTI during PLR, rather than FR, was associated with ICU mortality in this population.© 2024. Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.

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