Publication details

Epinephrine and short-term survival in cardiogenic shock: an individual data meta-analysis of 2583 patients

Authors

LEOPOLD Valentine GAYAT Etienne PIRRACCHIO Romain ŠPINAR Jindřich PAŘENICA Jiří TARVASMAKI Tuukka LASSUS Johan HARJOLA Veli-Pekka CHAMPION Sebastien ZANNAD Faiez VALENTE Serafina URBAN Philip CHUA Horng-Ruey BELLOMO Rinaldo POPOVIC Batric OUWENEEL Dagmar M. HENRIQUES Jose P. S. SIMONIS Gregor LEVY Bruno KIMMOUN Antoine GAUDARD Philippe BASIR Mir Babar MARKOTA Andrej ADLER Christoph REUTER Hannes MEBAZAA Alexandre CHOUIHED Tahar

Year of publication 2018
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Intensive care medicine
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00134-018-5222-9
Keywords Meta-analysis; Cardiogenic shock; Epinephrine; Prognosis
Description Catecholamines have been the mainstay of pharmacological treatment of cardiogenic shock (CS). Recently, use of epinephrine has been associated with detrimental outcomes. In the present study we aimed to evaluate the association between epinephrine use and short-term mortality in all-cause CS patients. We performed a meta-analysis of individual data with prespecified inclusion criteria: (1) patients in non-surgical CS treated with inotropes and/or vasopressors and (2) at least 15% of patients treated with epinephrine administrated alone or in association with other inotropes/vasopressors. The primary outcome was short-term mortality. Fourteen published cohorts and two unpublished data sets were included. We studied 2583 patients. Across all cohorts of patients, the incidence of epinephrine use was 37% (17-76%) and short-term mortality rate was 49% (21-69%). A positive correlation was found between percentages of epinephrine use and short-term mortality in the CS cohort. The risk of death was higher in epinephrine-treated CS patients (OR [CI] = 3.3 [2.8-3.9]) compared to patients treated with other drug regimens. Adjusted mortality risk remained striking in epinephrine-treated patients (n = 1227) (adjusted OR = 4.7 [3.4-6.4]). After propensity score matching, two sets of 338 matched patients were identified and epinephrine use remained associated with a strong detrimental impact on short-term mortality (OR = 4.2 [3.0-6.0]). In this very large cohort, epinephrine use for hemodynamic management of CS patients is associated with a threefold increase of risk of death.

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