• Pediatr Crit Care Me · Sep 2019

    Matched Retrospective Cohort Study of Thiamine to Treat Persistent Hyperlactatemia in Pediatric Septic Shock.

    • Scott L Weiss, Bridget Blowey, Luke Keele, Rebecca Ganetzky, Chaya N Murali, Julie C Fitzgerald, Robert M Sutton, and Robert A Berg.
    • Department of Pharmacy, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA.
    • Pediatr Crit Care Me. 2019 Sep 1; 20 (9): e452-e456.

    ObjectivesThiamine deficiency may propagate lactate production by limiting pyruvate dehydrogenase activity, and studies suggest benefit for thiamine administration in septic adults. We studied the effect of thiamine on physiologic and clinical outcomes for children with septic shock and hyperlactatemia.DesignRetrospective matched cohort study.SettingSingle academic PICU.PatientsSix thiamine-treated cases and nine matched controls.InterventionsNone.Measurements And Main ResultsThe primary outcome was change in blood lactate from prethiamine (T0, cases) or maximum (T0, controls) lactate through 24 hours later (T24). Secondary outcomes were change in lactate over 48 hours (T48) and 72 hours (T72), time to lactate normalization, changes in vasoactive-inotrope score, organ dysfunction severity (daily Pediatric Logistic Organ Dysfunction 2 score), and creatinine, PICU length of stay, and hospital mortality. Lactate was greater than 5 mmol/L for a median of 39 hours (range, 16.1-64.3 hr) prior to thiamine administration for cases compared with 3.4 hours (range, 0-22.9 hr) prior to maximum lactate for controls (p = 0.002). There was no difference in median (interquartile range) change in lactate from T0 to T24 between thiamine-treated cases and controls (-9.0, -17.0 to -5.0 vs -7.2, -9.0 to -5.3 mmol/L, p = 0.78), with both groups exhibiting a rapid decrease in lactate. There were also no differences in secondary outcomes between groups.ConclusionsTreatment of pediatric septic shock with thiamine was followed by rapid improvement in physiologic and clinical outcomes after prolonged hyperlactatemia. Although we are not able to infer that thiamine provided benefit over usual care, the rapid decline in lactate after thiamine despite a prolonged period of hyperlactatemia raises the possibility that thiamine helped to reverse lactate production.

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