BMJ Open (Jul 2023)

Doppler identified venous congestion in septic shock: protocol for an international, multi-centre prospective cohort study (Andromeda-VEXUS)

  • Bram Rochwerg,
  • Kimberley Lewis,
  • John Basmaji,
  • Jan Bakker,
  • Ross Prager,
  • Robert Arntfield,
  • Michael Pratte,
  • Eduardo Argaiz,
  • Philippe Rola,
  • William Beaubien-Souligny,
  • André Y Denault,
  • Korbin Haycock,
  • Francisco Miralles Aguiar,
  • Gustavo Ospina-Tascon,
  • Nicolas Orozco,
  • Ibrahim Quazi,
  • Eduardo Kattan,
  • Glenn Hernandez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-074843
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 7

Abstract

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Introduction Venous congestion is a pathophysiological state where high venous pressures cause organ oedema and dysfunction. Venous congestion is associated with worse outcomes, particularly acute kidney injury (AKI), for critically ill patients. Venous congestion can be measured by Doppler ultrasound at the bedside through interrogation of the inferior vena cava (IVC), hepatic vein (HV), portal vein (PV) and intrarenal veins (IRV). The objective of this study is to quantify the association between Doppler identified venous congestion and the need for renal replacement therapy (RRT) or death for patients with septic shock.Methods and analysis This study is a prespecified substudy of the ANDROMEDA-SHOCK 2 (AS-2) randomised control trial (RCT) assessing haemodynamic resuscitation in septic shock and will enrol at least 350 patients across multiple sites. We will include adult patients within 4 hours of fulfilling septic shock definition according to Sepsis-3 consensus conference. Using Doppler ultrasound, physicians will interrogate the IVC, HV, PV and IRV 6–12 hours after randomisation. Study investigators will provide web-based educational sessions to ultrasound operators and adjudicate image acquisition and interpretation. The primary outcome will be RRT or death within 28 days of septic shock. We will assess the hazard of RRT or death as a function of venous congestion using a Cox proportional hazards model. Sub-distribution HRs will describe the hazard of RRT given the competing risk of death.Ethics and dissemination We obtained ethics approval for the AS-2 RCT, including this observational substudy, from local ethics boards at all participating sites. We will report the findings of this study through open-access publication, presentation at international conferences, a coordinated dissemination strategy by investigators through social media, and an open-access workshop series in multiple languages.Trial registration number NCT05057611.