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Intensive care medicine · Feb 2015
Open lung biopsy in nonresolving ARDS frequently identifies diffuse alveolar damage regardless of the severity stage and may have implications for patient management.
- Claude Guerin, Frédérique Bayle, Véronique Leray, Sophie Debord, Alina Stoian, Hodane Yonis, Jean-Baptiste Roudaut, Gael Bourdin, Mojgan Devouassoux-Shisheboran, Elodie Bucher, Louis Ayzac, Sylvie Lantuejoul, Carole Philipponnet, Jean Louis Kemeny, Bertrand Souweine, and Jean-Christophe Richard.
- Service de Réanimation Médicale, Hôpital de la Croix Rousse, Hospices Civils de Lyon, Université de Lyon, 103 Grande Rue de la Croix-Rousse, 69004, Lyon, France, claude.guerin@chu-lyon.fr.
- Intensive Care Med. 2015 Feb 1;41(2):222-30.
PurposeThe aim of the present study was to assess the rate of diffuse alveolar damage (DAD) on open lung biopsy (OLB) performed in the ICU for nonresolving ARDS.MethodsA single-center retrospective study of patients meeting the Berlin definition criteria for ARDS who had undergone OLB for nonresolving ARDS. Patients were classified into mild, moderate and severe ARDS categories and according to the presence or absence of DAD on the OLB. The ARDS categories were assessed at baseline and at the time of the OLB. The OLBs were reviewed by two pathologists blinded to the ARDS classification. The primary endpoint was the rate of DAD according to the ARDS stage in the patients with nonresolving ARDS who had OLB. The secondary endpoint was the ability of DAD to predict ARDS among all the patients who had OLB. The same clinico-histopathological confrontation was cross validated in another ICU.ResultsFrom January 1998 to August 2013, 113 patients underwent OLB for acute hypoxemic respiratory failure, 83 of whom met the inclusion criteria for ARDS. At the time the OLB was performed, 11 of these patients had mild, 56 moderate, and 16 severe ARDS, respectively. The median (1st-3rd quartiles) time to OLB was 13 (10-18) and 9 (6-14) days from the onset of respiratory symptoms and from ARDS onset, respectively, with no statistical difference between the three ARDS groups. DAD was found in 48 (58 %) patients with ARDS, 4 (36 %) in the mild, 33 (59 %) in the moderate, and 11 (69 %) in the severe stage (P = 0.23). For the 113 patients who underwent OLB, the sensitivity and specificity of DAD to the Berlin definition was 0.58 (0.46-0.69) and 0.73 (0.54-0.88), respectively. Similar results were found in the other ICU.ConclusionsDAD is present in the majority of patients with nonresolving ARDs and its frequency is no different across the three ARDS stages. On this basis, the systematic use of steroids in nonresolving ARDS is not recommended.
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