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Impact of renal dysfunction on weaning from prolonged mechanical ventilation
Authors: David C Chao, David J Scheinhorn, Meg Stearn-Hassenpflug, B Eiseman, L Beart Norton, WA Knaus, EA Draper, DP Wagner, A Rauss, WA Knaus, E Patois, GM Chertow, CL Christiansen, PD Cleary, AA Gilbertson, JM Smith, SM Mostafa, M Tafreshi, RF Schneider, MJ Rosen, DJ Scheinhorn, M Hassenpflug, BM Artinian, L LaBree, JL Catlin, IL Cohen, FVM Booth, RJ Daly, EB Rudy, KS Thompson, DJ Scheinhorn, BA Artinian, J Catlin, DJ Scheinhorn, DC Chao, M Stearn-Hassenpflug, LD LaBree, DJ Heltsley, S Kraman, F Khan, S Patel, N Seriff, EM Levy, CM Viscoli, RI Horwitz, JH Turney, DJ Scheinhorn, H Neveu, D Kleinknecht, F Brivet, P Loirat, P Landais, HKL Simpson, MEM Allison, ABM Telfer
Journal: Critical Care (1997)
DOI: 10.1186/cc112
Abstract
In the intensive care unit (ICU) setting, the combination of mechanical ventilation and renal replacement therapy (RRT) has been associated with prolonged length of hospital stay, high cost of care and poor outcome. We gathered outcome data on patients who had severe renal dysfunction on transfer to our regional weaning center (RWC) for attempted weaning from prolonged mechanical ventilation (PMV). We screened the admission laboratory values of 1077 patients transferred to our RWC over an 8-year period. We reviewed the medical records of patients with serum creatinine > 2.5 mg/dl. Sixty-three patients met screening criteria and 40 patients were on RRT at the time of transfer. Eighteen patients had begun chronic RRT at least 2 months prior to admission to the transferring hospital for their current illness. Twenty-two patients had RRT initiated at the transferring hospital. Ten patients had RRT initiated at the RWC; eight patients had improvement or resolution of azotemia at our facility. RRT was withheld at patient/family request in five patients with progressive renal failure. None of the 50 patients who received RRT recovered renal function during treatment at our RWC. Intermittent hemodialysis was the standard RRT at the RWC. Duration of mechanical ventilation prior to transfer to the RWC was 49.7 ± 33.5 days (mean ± SD). = 0.029). Only four of the 10 patients survived more than 1 month, with the longest survival being 122 days. Patients who require PMV and RRT have a very poor prognosis. The small number of patients with renal insufficiency not requiring RRT had a more favorable hospital outcome and mortality, but long-term survival remained poor.
Background:
In the intensive care unit (ICU) setting, the combination of mechanical ventilation and renal replacement therapy (RRT) has been associated with prolonged length of hospital stay, high cost of care and poor outcome. We gathered outcome data on patients who had severe renal dysfunction on transfer to our regional weaning center (RWC) for attempted weaning from prolonged mechanical ventilation (PMV). We screened the admission laboratory values of 1077 patients transferred to our RWC over an 8-year period. We reviewed the medical records of patients with serum creatinine > 2.5 mg/dl.
Results:
Sixty-three patients met screening criteria and 40 patients were on RRT at the time of transfer. Eighteen patients had begun chronic RRT at least 2 months prior to admission to the transferring hospital for their current illness. Twenty-two patients had RRT initiated at the transferring hospital. Ten patients had RRT initiated at the RWC; eight patients had improvement or resolution of azotemia at our facility. RRT was withheld at patient/family request in five patients with progressive renal failure. None of the 50 patients who received RRT recovered renal function during treatment at our RWC. Intermittent hemodialysis was the standard RRT at the RWC. Duration of mechanical ventilation prior to transfer to the RWC was 49.7 ± 33.5 days (mean ± SD).
= 0.029). Only four of the 10 patients survived more than 1 month, with the longest survival being 122 days.
Conclusions:
Patients who require PMV and RRT have a very poor prognosis. The small number of patients with renal insufficiency not requiring RRT had a more favorable hospital outcome and mortality, but long-term survival remained poor.
Introduction
]. This relationship has not been studied in the post-intensive care unit (ICU) setting.
Barlow Respiratory Hospital (BRH) functions as a regional weaning center (RWC), accepting and attempting to wean patients from prolonged mechanical ventilation (PMV). Patients are transferred to BRH from the ICU's of surrounding hospitals after 4-6 weeks of ventilator dependency. These patients typically have chronic respiratory impairment exacerbated by a serious acute illness, such as infection, cardiac event, or surgical catastrophe.
]. In this study, we gathered outcome data on the cohort of ventilator-dependent patients with severe renal dysfunction on admission to our RWC in order to further elucidate the impact of renal dysfunction on weaning from PMV.
Methods
We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of 1077 patients transferred to our RWC from 1988 to 1996. All patients with admission serum creatinine > 2.5 mg/dl were included in the severe renal dysfunction cohort. Patients with admission serum creatinine ≤ 2.5 mg/dl served as controls. We recorded demographic data, admission blood chemistries and blood gas results. The onset and etiologies of respiratory and renal failures were assessed and recorded based on the transfer records. We reviewed the patients' hospital course at the RWC and scored outcomes of weaning efforts (weaned, failed to wean, died) upon discharge. We tabulated disposition and survival data obtained from post-discharge follow-up records.
All dialysis patients were followed by board-certified nephrologists who wrote the dialysis orders exclusively. Maintenance RRT utilized conventional intermittent hemodialysis for 2-4 h three times a week, consistent with routine practice in the United States. Bicarbonate-based dialysate and cellulose membranes were predominantly used.
], pH; Wilcoxon Rank Sum tests for comparisons of median times spent ventilator-dependent prior to and during a patient's RWC stay and Fisher's Exact test for comparing weaning outcome and disposition results.
Results
.
lists the etiologies of both acute and chronic causes of renal dysfunction identified from the patients' transfer records. Incomplete records and the patients' lengthy hospital courses made identification of a single specific cause of renal dysfunction difficult. Furthermore, acute insult(s) were often superimposed on underlying renal insufficiency. Typically, renal function declined during the course of sepsis or presumed sepsis, borderline or frank hypotension, the peri-operative or post-resuscitation period, and while receiving multiple medications with potential renal toxicity.
= 0.13). Ten of the 63 patients wee discharged alive, but only one was able to return home, with the remainder being discharged to extended care facilities. Post-discharge follow-up of the 10 patients showed that only four survived more than 1 month. No patient with renal dysfunction achieved 1-year survival, with 122 days being the longest post-discharge survival in that cohort. In the control group, 42% were discharged home and 37.2% of all discharges were alive at 1 year.
Discussion
].
Sixty-three of 1077 ventilator-dependent patients had concurrent severe renal dysfunction on admission to our RWC; 40 of them were receiving RRT. We found that patients with renal dysfunction spent significantly more time in the ICU than controls prior to transfer to our RWC. They are also less likely to have chronic obstructive pulmonary disease as the primary reason for PMV. The extended ICU stays are most likely a reflection of higher acuity resulting in increased interventions. We found that the majority of these patients were not RRT-dependent prior to ICU entry, but had incurred various renal insults during the course of treatment, not unlike the lung injuries leading to PMV. The etiology of renal dysfunction was often multifactorial with acute insult(s) usually superimposed on chronic renal insufficiency. Although most patients developed acute renal failure necessitating RRT, none had recovery of renal function.
]. We found an overall weaning success rate of 8% for patients with concurrent mechanical ventilation and RRT. None of the 10 patients who had RRT initiated at BRH weaned or survived to discharge, possibly reflecting progressive and irreversible organ function decline despite treatment.
All five patients in whom RRT was withheld despite the medical indication for dialysis were in progressive multiple organ system failure (MOSF), with the decision not to initiate treatment based on a grave short-term prognosis. It is reasonable to assume that RRT would not have altered the outcome of this group. This assumption is based on the following:
];
], and
- despite treatment of the underlying trigger of MOSF (sepsis in these cases), and aggressive supportive therapy, the renal failure was progressive and irreversible.
]. Despite weaning outcomes similar to that of the controls, their long-term prognosis was uniformly poor, as it was for all groups. Of the 10 patients discharged alive, the longest survival was only 22 days. Although functional status was not specifically studied, the unfavorable disposition (only one of the 10 discharged patients went home) and short survival imply a very low functional capacity and quality of life.
]. Relative reduction in risk of death, however, is expected to be low in view of the multiple comorbid conditions in this population. Since these patients have already achieved hemodynamic stability to transfer out of the ICU setting, the indication for continuous RRT is less apparent.
We think our results have broader clinical relevance than for the RWC alone. On the day of transfer to the RWC, the ICU team has decided the next level of care in the critical care continuum, and whether weaning efforts should continue. Caution should be exercised, however, in applying our findings to patients early in the ICU stay, in whom renal dysfunction commonly develops, but may resolve before discharge. Also, we did not capture the cohort of patients who had normal renal function on RWC admission but developed renal failure during our treatment; their prognosis remains to be studied.
Conclusion
Patients with PMV and concurrent severe renal dysfunction on transfer to the RWC have an extremely poor prognosis for weaning outcome and both short- and long-term survival. The duration of mechanical ventilation in the ICU prior to transfer to the RWC was significantly longer where renal dysfunction also developed. Time to wean tended to be longer in the few patients with renal dysfunction who did wean. The small number of PMV patients with renal insufficiency not requiring RRT had a better weaning success rate and mortality than those receiving RRT, but long-term survival was still poor.
Figures and Tables
Comparison of demographics and selected measurements in PMV patients with and without renal dysfunction
= alveolar-arterial pressure difference.
Determinants of dysfunction in PMV patients: underlying factors and acute insults
MOSF = multiple organ system failure; PMV=prolonged mechanical ventilation; CABG=coronary artery bypass graft.
Outcomes of weaning attempts in patients with renal dysfunction, by sub-group
RRT = renal replacement theraphy; RWC = regional weaning center.
Comparison of outcome and 1 year survival in PMV patients with and without renal dysfunction
PMV = prolonged mechanical ventilation; BRH = Barlow Respiratory Hospital.
Keywords
- hemodialysis
- patient outcome
- prolonged mechanical ventilation
- renal failure
- renal replacement therapy
- respiratory failure
- ventilator weaning
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