• Intensive care medicine · Sep 1999

    Multicenter Study Comparative Study

    Prevalence, etiologies and outcome of the acute respiratory distress syndrome among hypoxemic ventilated patients. SRLF Collaborative Group on Mechanical Ventilation. Société de Réanimation de Langue Française.

    • E Roupie, E Lepage, M Wysocki, J Y Fagon, J Chastre, D Dreyfuss, H Mentec, J Carlet, C Brun-Buisson, F Lemaire, and L Brochard.
    • Medical Intensive Care Unit, INSERM U492, Hôpital Henri Mondor, AP-HP, Paris XII University, F-94 010 Créteil, France.
    • Intensive Care Med. 1999 Sep 1;25(9):920-9.

    ObjectiveTo evaluate the prevalence and outcome of the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) among patients requiring mechanical ventilation.DesignA prospective, multi-institutional, initial cohort study including 28-day follow-up.SettingsThirty-six French intensive care units (ICUs) from a working group of the French Intensive Care Society (SRLF).PatientsAll the patients entering the ICUs during a 14-day period were screened prospectively. Hypoxemic patients, defined as having a PaO(2)/FIO(2) ratio (P/F) of 300 mmHg or less and receiving mechanical ventilation, were classified into three groups, according to the Consensus Conference on ARDS: group 1 refers to ARDS (P/F: 200 mmHg or less and bilateral infiltrates on the chest X-ray); group 2 to acute lung injury (ALI) without having criteria for ARDS (200 < P/F ResultsNine hundred seventy-six patients entered the ICUs during the study period, 43 % of them being mechanically ventilated and 213 (22 %) meeting the criteria for one of the three groups. Among all the ICU admissions, ARDS, ALI and group 3 patients amounted, respectively, to 6.9 % (67), 1.8 % (17) and 13.3 % (129) of the patients, and represented 31.5 %, 8.1 % and 60.2 % of the hypoxemic, ventilated patients. The overall mortality rate was 41 % and was significantly higher in ARDS patients than in the others (60 % vs 31 % p < 0.01). In group 3, 42 patients had P/F less than 200 mmHg associated with unilateral lung injury; mortality was significantly lower (40.5 %) than in the ARDS group. In the whole group of hypoxemic, ventilated patients, septic shock and severity indices but not oxygenation indices were significantly associated with mortality, while the association with immunosuppression revealed only a trend (p = 0.06).ConclusionsIn this survey we found that very few patients fulfilled the ALI non-ARDS criteria and that the mortality of the group with ARDS was high.

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