Variation in Early Management Practices in Moderate-to-Severe ARDS in the United States: The Severe ARDS: Generating Evidence Study.

Abstract

Background

Although specific interventions previously demonstrated benefit in patients with ARDS, use of these interventions is inconsistent, and patient mortality remains high. The impact of variability in center management practices on ARDS mortality rates remains unknown.

Research question

What is the impact of treatment variability on mortality in patients with moderate to severe ARDS in the United States?

Study design and methods

We conducted a multicenter, observational cohort study of mechanically ventilated adults with ARDS and Pao2 to Fio2 ratio of ≤ 150 with positive end-expiratory pressure of ≥ 5 cm H2O, who were admitted to 29 US centers between October 1, 2016, and April 30, 2017. The primary outcome was 28-day in-hospital mortality. Center variation in ventilator management, adjunctive therapy use, and mortality also were assessed.

Results

A total of 2,466 patients were enrolled. Median baseline Pao2 to Fio2 ratio was 105 (interquartile range, 78.0-129.0). In-hospital 28-day mortality was 40.7%. Initial adherence to lung protective ventilation (LPV; tidal volume, ≤ 6.5 mL/kg predicted body weight; plateau pressure, or when unavailable, peak inspiratory pressure, ≤ 30 mm H2O) was 31.4% and varied between centers (0%-65%), as did rates of adjunctive therapy use (27.1%-96.4%), methods used (neuromuscular blockade, prone positioning, systemic steroids, pulmonary vasodilators, and extracorporeal support), and mortality (16.7%-73.3%). Center standardized mortality ratios (SMRs), calculated using baseline patient-level characteristics to derive expected mortality rate, ranged from 0.33 to 1.98. Of the treatment-level factors explored, only center adherence to early LPV was correlated with SMR.

Interpretation

Substantial center-to-center variability exists in ARDS management, suggesting that further opportunities for improving ARDS outcomes exist. Early adherence to LPV was associated with lower center mortality and may be a surrogate for overall quality of care processes. Future collaboration is needed to identify additional treatment-level factors influencing center-level outcomes.

Trial registry

ClinicalTrials.gov; No.: NCT03021824; URL: www.clinicaltrials.gov.

Department

Description

Provenance

Subjects

Severe ARDS: Generating Evidence (SAGE) Study Investigators, Society of Critical Care Medicine's Discovery Network, Humans, Vasodilator Agents, Glucocorticoids, Respiration, Artificial, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation, Positive-Pressure Respiration, Neuromuscular Blockade, Severity of Illness Index, Hospital Mortality, Cohort Studies, Prone Position, Adult, Aged, Middle Aged, Quality of Health Care, Guideline Adherence, United States, Female, Male, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Ventilator-Induced Lung Injury, Patient Positioning, Early Medical Intervention, Practice Patterns, Physicians', Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1016/j.chest.2021.05.047

Publication Info

Qadir, Nida, Raquel R Bartz, Mary L Cooter, Catherine L Hough, Michael J Lanspa, Valerie M Banner-Goodspeed, Jen-Ting Chen, Shewit Giovanni, et al. (2021). Variation in Early Management Practices in Moderate-to-Severe ARDS in the United States: The Severe ARDS: Generating Evidence Study. Chest, 160(4). pp. 1304–1315. 10.1016/j.chest.2021.05.047 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/34224.

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Scholars@Duke

Komisarow

Jordan Komisarow

Associate Professor of Neurosurgery

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