Abstract

BackgroundAlthough net ultrafiltration (UFNET) is frequently used for treatment of fluid overload in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury, the optimal intensity of UFNET is unclear. Among critically ill patients with fluid overload receiving renal replacement therapy (RRT), we examined the association between UFNET intensity and risk-adjusted 1-year mortality.MethodsWe selected patients with fluid overload ≥ 5% of body weight prior to initiation of RRT from a large academic medical center ICU dataset. UFNET intensity was calculated as the net volume of fluid ultrafiltered per day from initiation of either continuous or intermittent RRT until the end of ICU stay adjusted for patient hospital admission body weight. We stratified UFNET as low (≤ 20 ml/kg/day), moderate (> 20 to ≤ 25 ml/kg/day) or high (> 25 ml/kg/day) intensity. We adjusted for age, sex, body mass index, race, surgery, baseline estimated glomerular filtration rate, oliguria, first RRT modality, pre-RRT fluid balance, duration of RRT, time to RRT initiation from ICU admission, APACHE III score, mechanical ventilation use, suspected sepsis, mean arterial pressure on day 1 of RRT, cumulative fluid balance during RRT and cumulative vasopressor dose during RRT. We fitted logistic regression for 1-year mortality, Gray’s survival model and propensity matching to account for indication bias.ResultsOf 1075 patients, the distribution of high, moderate and low-intensity UFNET groups was 40.4%, 15.2% and 44.2% and 1-year mortality was 59.4% vs 60.2% vs 69.7%, respectively (p = 0.003). Using logistic regression, high-intensity compared with low-intensity UFNET was associated with lower mortality (adjusted odds ratio 0.61, 95% CI 0.41–0.93, p = 0.02). Using Gray’s model, high UFNET was associated with decreased mortality up to 39 days after ICU admission (adjusted hazard ratio range 0.50–0.73). After combining low and moderate-intensity UFNET groups (n = 258) and propensity matching with the high-intensity group (n = 258), UFNET intensity > 25 ml/kg/day compared with ≤ 25 ml/kg/day was associated with lower mortality (57% vs 67.8%, p = 0.01). Findings were robust to several sensitivity analyses.ConclusionsAmong critically ill patients with ≥ 5% fluid overload and receiving RRT, UFNET intensity > 25 ml/kg/day compared with ≤ 20 ml/kg/day was associated with lower 1-year risk-adjusted mortality. Whether tolerating intensive UFNET is just a marker for recovery or a mediator requires further research.

Highlights

  • Net ultrafiltration (UFNET) is frequently used for treatment of fluid overload in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury, the optimal intensity of UFNET is unclear

  • Understanding the intensity–outcome relationship will aid in standardizing UFNET intensity and implementing quality measures [15, 16]. In this observational study involving a large heterogeneous cohort of critically ill patients with ≥ 5% Fluid overload (FO) and receiving renal replacement therapy (RRT), we examined the association between UFNET intensity and its association with risk-adjusted 1-year mortality

  • Patients with UFNET intensity > 25 ml/kg/day compared with ≤ 25 ml/kg/day had lower 1-year mortality (57% vs 67.8%, p = 0.01; Fig. 2), which persisted after adjusting for vasopressor dose (AOR 0.63, 95% CI 0.44–0.90, p = 0.011)

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Summary

Introduction

Net ultrafiltration (UFNET) is frequently used for treatment of fluid overload in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury, the optimal intensity of UFNET is unclear. Among critically ill patients with fluid overload receiving renal replacement therapy (RRT), we examined the association between UFNET intensity and riskadjusted 1-year mortality. Observational studies suggest that fluid removal using net ultrafiltration (UFNET) may be associated with improved outcomes [2], and clinical and consensus guidelines recommend UFNET for the treatment of FO in patients with oliguric AKI who are resistant to diuretic therapy [5, 6]. More intensive UFNET with a faster rate or larger volume of fluid removal, may be associated with increased hemodynamic and cardiovascular stress [10], leading to ischemic organ injury and mortality in critically ill patients [11]. Three observational studies in outpatients with end-stage renal disease suggest that UFNET intensity > 10 ml/kg/h is associated with increased overall [12,13,14] and cardiovascular [12] mortality

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