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Question clinique
Does infusion of sodium bicarbonate improve outcomes in critically ill patients with severe metabolic acidosis?
L’Essentiel
In critically ill patients with severe metabolic acidosis, sodium bicarbonate infusion leads to decreased need for renal replacement therapy (number needed to treat = 6), but has no effect on short-term mortality or organ failure. In the subset of patients who also have acute kidney injury, however, sodium bicarbonate infusion results in fewer deaths. 1b
Référence
Plan de l'etude: Randomized controlled trial (nonblinded)
Financement: Government
Cadre: Inpatient (ICU only)
Sommaire
These investigators randomized 389 critically ill patients with severe metabolic acidosis (pH < 7.20, PaCO2 < 45 mmHg, and sodium bicarbonate < 20 mmol/L) to receive sodium bicarbonate (intervention group) or no sodium bicarbonate (control group). Main exclusion criteria included the presence of respiratory acidosis, evidence of gastrointestinal or urinary losses of sodium bicarbonate, stage IV chronic kidney disease, and ketoacidosis. Baseline characteristics were similar in the 2 groups. The intervention group received 4.2% sodium bicarbonate intravenously at a volume of 125 mL to 250 mL per infusion to target an arterial pH of 7.30. The 2 groups were otherwise treated similarly. More than half the patients had acidemia related to septic shock and approximately 80% were receiving mechanical ventilation and vasopressor support. One quarter of the patients in the control group did receive sodium bicarbonate during the course of the study, primarily as a salvage therapy. Although there was no significant difference detected in the primary composite outcome of 28-day all-cause death or organ failure at 7 days (66% in intervention group vs 71% in control group; P = .24), the intervention group did have fewer patients who required renal replacement therapy (35% vs 52%; P = .0009). Additionally, in the subgroup of patients with acute kidney injury, the intervention group fared better with fewer deaths (number needed to treat = 6), less organ failure, and increased number of vasopressor-free days.
Reviewer
Nita Shrikant Kulkarni, MD
Assistant Professor in Hospital Medicine
Northwestern University
Chicago, IL
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