Scientific Reports (Jan 2023)

Clinical relevance of timing of assessment of ICU mortality in patients with moderate-to-severe Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

  • Jesús Villar,
  • Jesús M. González-Martin,
  • José M. Añón,
  • Carlos Ferrando,
  • Juan A. Soler,
  • Fernando Mosteiro,
  • Juan M. Mora-Ordoñez,
  • Alfonso Ambrós,
  • Lorena Fernández,
  • Raquel Montiel,
  • Anxela Vidal,
  • Tomás Muñoz,
  • Lina Pérez-Méndez,
  • Pedro Rodríguez-Suárez,
  • Cristina Fernández,
  • Rosa L. Fernández,
  • Tamas Szakmany,
  • Karen E. A. Burns,
  • Ewout W. Steyerberg,
  • Arthur S. Slutsky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-28824-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Mortality is a frequently reported outcome in clinical studies of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). However, timing of mortality assessment has not been well characterized. We aimed to identify a crossing-point between cumulative survival and death in the intensive care unit (ICU) of patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS, beyond which the number of survivors would exceed the number of deaths. We hypothesized that this intersection would occur earlier in a successful clinical trial vs. observational studies of moderate/severe ARDS and predict treatment response. We conducted an ancillary study of 1580 patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS managed with lung-protective ventilation to assess the relevance and timing of measuring ICU mortality rates at different time-points during ICU stay. First, we analyzed 1303 patients from four multicenter, observational cohorts enrolling consecutive patients with moderate/severe ARDS. We assessed cumulative ICU survival from the time of moderate/severe ARDS diagnosis to ventilatory support discontinuation within 7-days, 28-days, 60-days, and at ICU discharge. Then, we compared these findings to those of a successful randomized trial of 277 moderate/severe ARDS patients. In the observational cohorts, ICU mortality (487/1303, 37.4%) and 28-day mortality (425/1102, 38.6%) were similar (p = 0.549). Cumulative proportion of ICU survivors and non-survivors crossed at day-7; after day-7, the number of ICU survivors was progressively higher compared to non-survivors. Measures of oxygenation, lung mechanics, and severity scores were different between survivors and non-survivors at each point-in-time (p < 0.001). In the trial cohort, the cumulative proportion of survivors and non-survivors in the treatment group crossed before day-3 after diagnosis of moderate/severe ARDS. In clinical ARDS studies, 28-day mortality closely approximates and may be used as a surrogate for ICU mortality. For patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS, ICU mortality assessment within the first week of a trial might be an early predictor of treatment response.