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Intensive care medicine · Sep 2016
Multicenter Study Observational StudyContinuous renal replacement therapy versus intermittent hemodialysis in intensive care patients: impact on mortality and renal recovery.
- Anne-Sophie Truche, Michael Darmon, Sébastien Bailly, Christophe Clec'h, Claire Dupuis, Benoit Misset, Elie Azoulay, Carole Schwebel, Lila Bouadma, Hatem Kallel, Christophe Adrie, Anne-Sylvie Dumenil, Laurent Argaud, Guillaume Marcotte, Samir Jamali, Philippe Zaoui, Virginie Laurent, Dany Goldgran-Toledano, Romain Sonneville, Bertrand Souweine, Jean-Francois Timsit, and OUTCOMEREA Study Group.
- UMR 1137, IAME Team 5, DeSCID: Decision Sciences in Infectious Diseases, Control and Care, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Inserm/Paris Diderot University, 75018, Paris, France.
- Intensive Care Med. 2016 Sep 1; 42 (9): 1408-17.
PurposeThe best renal replacement therapy (RRT) modality remains controversial. We compared mortality and short- and long-term renal recovery between patients treated with continuous RRT and intermittent hemodialysis.MethodsPatients of the prospective observational multicenter cohort database OUTCOMEREA™ were included if they underwent at least one RRT session between 2004 and 2014. Differences in patients' baseline and daily characteristics between treatment groups were taken into account by using a marginal structural Cox model, allowing one to substantially reduce the bias resulting from confounding factors in observational longitudinal data analysis. The composite primary endpoint was 30-day mortality and dialysis dependency.ResultsAmong 1360 included patients with RRT, 544 (40.0 %) and 816 (60.0 %) were initially treated by continuous RRT and intermittent hemodialysis, respectively. At day 30, 39.6 % patients were dead. Among survivors, 23.8 % still required RRT. There was no difference between groups for the primary endpoint in global population (HR 1.00, 95 % CI 0.77-1.29; p = 0.97). In patients with higher weight gain at RRT initiation, mortality and dialysis dependency were significantly lower with continuous RRT (HR 0.54, 95 % CI 0.29-0.99; p = 0.05). Conversely, this technique appeared to be deleterious in patients without shock (HR 2.24, 95 % CI 1.24-4.04; p = 0.01). Six-month mortality and persistent renal dysfunction were not influenced by the RRT modality in patients with dialysis dependence at ICU discharge.ConclusionContinuous RRT did not appear to improve 30-day and 6-month patient outcomes. It seems beneficial for patients with fluid overload, but might be deleterious in the absence of hemodynamic failure.
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