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The influence of corticosteroid treatment on the outcome of influenza A(H1N1pdm09)-related critical illness

Authors :
Delaney, Jesse W
Pinto, Ruxandra
Long, Jennifer
Lamontagne, François
Adhikari, Neill K
Kumar, Anand
Marshall, John C
Cook, Deborah J
Jouvet, Philippe
Ferguson, Niall D
Griesdale, Donald
Burry, Lisa D
Burns, Karen E A
Hutchison, Jamie
Mehta, Sangeeta
Menon, Kusum
Fowler, Robert A
Publisher :
BioMed Central

Abstract

Background: Patients with 2009 pandemic influenza A(H1N1pdm09)-related critical illness were frequently treated with systemic corticosteroids. While observational studies have reported significant corticosteroid-associated mortality after adjusting for baseline differences in patients treated with corticosteroids or not, corticosteroids have remained a common treatment in subsequent influenza outbreaks, including avian influenza A(H7N9). Our objective was to describe the use of corticosteroids in these patients and investigate predictors of steroid prescription and clinical outcomes, adjusting for both baseline and time-dependent factors. Methods: In an observational cohort study of adults with H1N1pdm09-related critical illness from 51 Canadian ICUs, we investigated predictors of steroid administration and outcomes of patients who received and those who did not receive corticosteroids. We adjusted for potential baseline confounding using multivariate logistic regression and propensity score analysis and adjusted for potential time-dependent confounding using marginal structural models. Results: Among 607 patients, corticosteroids were administered to 280 patients (46.1 %) at a median daily dose of 227 (interquartile range, 154–443) mg of hydrocortisone equivalents for a median of 7.0 (4.0–13.0) days. Compared with patients who did not receive corticosteroids, patients who received corticosteroids had higher hospital crude mortality (25.5 % vs 16.4 %, p = 0.007) and fewer ventilator-free days at 28 days (12.5 ± 10.7 vs 15.7 ± 10.1, p

Subjects

Subjects :
3. Good health

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........84010aba5933fc608d64346d76eec240