Effect of baseline serum albumin concentration on outcome of resuscitation with albumin or saline in patients in intensive care units: analysis of data from the saline versus albumin fluid evaluation (SAFE) study Saline versus Albumin Fluid Evaluation Study Investigators
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چکیده
Objective To determine whether outcomes of resuscitation with albumin or saline in the intensive care unit depend on patients’ baseline serum albumin concentration. Design Analysis of data from a double blind, randomised controlled trial. Setting Intensive care units of 16 hospitals in Australia and New Zealand. Participants 6045 participants in the saline versus albumin fluid evaluation (SAFE) study. Interventions Fluid resuscitation with 4% albumin or saline in patients with a baseline serum albumin concentration of 25 g/l or less or more than 25 g/l. Main outcome measures Primary outcome was all cause mortality at 28 days. Secondary outcomes were length of stay in the intensive care unit, length of stay in hospital, duration of renal replacement therapy, and duration of mechanical ventilation. Main results The odds ratios for death for albumin compared with saline for patients with a baseline serum albumin concentration of 25 g/l or less and more than 25 g/l were 0.87 and 1.09, respectively (ratio of odds ratios 0.80, 95% confidence interval 0.63 to 1.02); P = 0.08 for heterogeneity. No significant interaction was found between baseline serum albumin concentration as a continuous variable and the effect of albumin and saline on mortality. No consistent interaction was found between baseline serum albumin concentration and treatment effects on length of stay in the intensive care unit, length of hospital stay, duration of renal replacement therapy, or duration of mechanical ventilation. Conclusion The outcomes of resuscitation with albumin and saline are similar irrespective of patients’ baseline serum albumin concentration. Trial registration ISRCTN76588266.
منابع مشابه
Effect of baseline serum albumin concentration on outcome of resuscitation with albumin or saline in patients in intensive care units: analysis of data from the saline versus albumin fluid evaluation (SAFE) study
Objective To determine whether outcomes of resuscitation with albumin or saline in the intensive care unit depend on patients’ baseline serum albumin concentration. Design Analysis of data from a double blind, randomised controlled trial. Setting Intensive care units of 16 hospitals in Australia and New Zealand. Participants 6045 participants in the saline versus albumin fluid evaluation (SAFE)...
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Intravascular fluid therapy is a common critical care intervention. However, the optimal type of resuscitation fluid, crystalloid or colloid, remains controversial. Despite the many theoretical benefits of human albumin administration in critically ill patients, there has been little evidence to support its widespread clinical use. Previous systematic reviews have led to conflicting results reg...
متن کاملFluid resuscitation with albumin or saline in the intensive care unit did not affect 28-day mortality rates.
M e t h o d s Design: Randomized controlled trial (Saline versus Albumin Fluid Evaluation [SAFE] Study). Allocation: Concealed.* Blinding: Blinded (clinicians, patients, outcome assessors, biostatisticians, and {data collectors}†).* Follow-up period: 28 days. Setting: 16 academic tertiary care medicalsurgical ICUs in Australia and New Zealand. Patients: 6997 patients ≥ 18 years of age (mean age...
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Citation Myburgh J, Cooper DJ, Finfer S, Bellomo R, Norton R, Bishop N, Kai LS, Vallance S: Saline or albumin for fl uid resuscitation in patients with traumatic brain injury. N Engl J Med 2007, 357:874-884 [1]. Background The Saline versus Albumin Fluid Evaluation study suggested that patients with traumatic brain injury resuscitated with albumin had a higher mortality rate than those resuscit...
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The Saline versus Albumin Fluid Evaluation (SAFE) study is a collaboration of the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society Clinical Trials Group, the Australian Red Cross Blood Service, and the George Institute for International Health. The writing committee of the SAFE–Traumatic Brain Injury study ( John Myburgh, M.D., Ph.D., D. James Cooper, M.D., Simon Finfer, M.D., Rinaldo Bellomo,...
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