Annals of Intensive Care (Jul 2017)

Intermittent versus continuous renal replacement therapy in acute methanol poisoning: comparison of clinical effectiveness in mass poisoning outbreaks

  • Sergey Zakharov,
  • Jan Rulisek,
  • Olga Nurieva,
  • Katerina Kotikova,
  • Tomas Navratil,
  • Martin Komarc,
  • Daniela Pelclova,
  • Knut Erik Hovda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13613-017-0300-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background Intermittent hemodialysis (IHD) is the modality of choice in the extracorporeal treatment (ECTR) of acute methanol poisoning. However, the comparative clinical effectiveness of intermittent versus continuous modalities (CRRT) is unknown. During an outbreak of mass methanol poisoning, we therefore studied the effect of IHD versus CRRT on mortality and the prevalence of visual/central nervous system (CNS) sequelae in survivors. Methods The study was designed as prospective observational cohort study. Patients hospitalized with a diagnosis of acute methanol poisoning were identified for the study. Exploratory factor analysis and multivariate logistic regression were applied to determine the effect of ECTR modality on the outcome. Results Data were obtained from 41 patients treated with IHD and 40 patients with CRRT. The follow-up time in survivors was two years. Both groups of patients were comparable by age, time to presentation, laboratory data, clinical features, and other treatment applied. The CRRT group was more acidemic (arterial blood pH 6.96 ± 0.08 vs. 7.17 ± 0.07; p 0.05). Conclusions In spite of the faster correction of the acidosis and the quicker removal of the toxic metabolite in intermittent dialysis, we did not find significant differences in the treatment outcomes between the two groups after adjusting for the degree of acidemia and the severity of poisoning on admission. These findings support the strategy of “use what you have” in situations with large outbreaks and limited dialysis capacity.

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