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Outcomes of Patients Presenting with Mild Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Authors :
Gerard Curley
Lorenzo Schiavoni
Giacomo Monti
Hernan Aguirre-Bermeo
Giacomo Bellani
Gustavo A. Plotnikow
Emre Erbabacan
Philippe Michel
Gyorgy Frendl
Niall Ferguson
Thomas Kander
Yasuaki Ogino
Felipe Martinez
Luca Brazzi
Ewan Goligher
SILVIO A. ÑAMENDYS-SILVA
Kai Zacharowski
Lars Hedlund
Rodrigo Biondi
Dana Tomescu
Alexey Gritsan
Matteo Pozzi
Andrea Cortegiani
Serena Knowles
Candelaria De Haro
Nuttapol Rittayamai
Shailesh Bihari
Olegs Sabelnikovs
Jonathan Chelly
Riccardo Colombo
Aroa Gomez Brey
Paolo Pelosi
Marco Bezzi
Hamidreza Jammati
Vivek Kakar
Daniel McAuley
Luciano Gattinoni
Nelson Barros
Sharif Zein
Paolo FORMENTI
VINCENZO POTA
Joana Berger-Estilita
Alistair Nichol
Michele Umbrello
Martin Dres
Carlo Volta
Jean-Daniel Chiche
Ingeborg Welters
Savino Spadaro
Tamas Szakmany
Anatole Harrois
Hasan M Al-Dorzi
Sebastien Jochmans
Maurizio Fusari
Christopher Tainter
Andrea Tinnirello
Sally Humphreys
Luis Alejandro Sánchez-Hurtado
Gilda Cinnella
Damien Roux
Evgeny Grigoryev
Ghaleb Almekhlafi
Dorothy Breen
Alessandro Protti
Necmettin Unal
Alejandro Bruhn
Ednan Bajwa
Rola Jaafar
Artigas Antonio
Ceri Battle
Christina Whitehead
Anil Hormis
Jon Laake
Serge Heines
Nora Di Tomasso
Guillermo M. Albaiceta
Raúl De Pablo Sánchez
Nicolas TERZI
Marcus Schultz
Giovanna Occhipinti
Source :
Anesthesiology. 130:263-283
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2019.

Abstract

Editor’s Perspective What We Already Know about This Topic What This Article Tells Us That Is New Background Patients with initial mild acute respiratory distress syndrome are often underrecognized and mistakenly considered to have low disease severity and favorable outcomes. They represent a relatively poorly characterized population that was only classified as having acute respiratory distress syndrome in the most recent definition. Our primary objective was to describe the natural course and the factors associated with worsening and mortality in this population. Methods This study analyzed patients from the international prospective Large Observational Study to Understand the Global Impact of Severe Acute Respiratory Failure (LUNG SAFE) who had initial mild acute respiratory distress syndrome in the first day of inclusion. This study defined three groups based on the evolution of severity in the first week: “worsening” if moderate or severe acute respiratory distress syndrome criteria were met, “persisting” if mild acute respiratory distress syndrome criteria were the most severe category, and “improving” if patients did not fulfill acute respiratory distress syndrome criteria any more from day 2. Results Among 580 patients with initial mild acute respiratory distress syndrome, 18% (103 of 580) continuously improved, 36% (210 of 580) had persisting mild acute respiratory distress syndrome, and 46% (267 of 580) worsened in the first week after acute respiratory distress syndrome onset. Global in-hospital mortality was 30% (172 of 576; specifically 10% [10 of 101], 30% [63 of 210], and 37% [99 of 265] for patients with improving, persisting, and worsening acute respiratory distress syndrome, respectively), and the median (interquartile range) duration of mechanical ventilation was 7 (4, 14) days (specifically 3 [2, 5], 7 [4, 14], and 11 [6, 18] days for patients with improving, persisting, and worsening acute respiratory distress syndrome, respectively). Admissions for trauma or pneumonia, higher nonpulmonary sequential organ failure assessment score, lower partial pressure of alveolar oxygen/fraction of inspired oxygen, and higher peak inspiratory pressure were independently associated with worsening. Conclusions Most patients with initial mild acute respiratory distress syndrome continue to fulfill acute respiratory distress syndrome criteria in the first week, and nearly half worsen in severity. Their mortality is high, particularly in patients with worsening acute respiratory distress syndrome, emphasizing the need for close attention to this patient population.

Details

ISSN :
00033022
Volume :
130
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Anesthesiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fc6790b01e3691d2da04e3a138624eca