Association Between Body Weight Variation and Survival and Other Adverse Events in Critically Ill Patients With Shock: A Multicenter Cohort Study of the OUTCOMEREA Network

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Gros, A. | Dupuis, C. | Ruckly, S. | Lautrette, A. | Garrouste-Orgeas, M. | Gainnier, M. | Forel, J. M. | Marcotte, G. | Azoulay, E. | Cohen, Y. | Schwebel, C. | Argaud, Laurent | Montmollin, E., De | Siami, S. | Goldgran-Toledano, D. | Darmon, M. | Timsit, J. F.

Edité par CCSD ; Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins -

International audience. Objectives: This study in critically ill patients with shock assessed the prognostic value of body weight variations occurring each day from day 3 to day 7 on the 30-day outcome in terms of mortality, occurrence of ventilator-associated pneumonia and of bedsore, and occurrence of length of stay. Design: Retrospective analysis of data. Multivariate subdistribution survival models were used at each day, from day 3 to day 7. The impact of body weight variations on length of stay was estimated through a multivariate negative binomial regression model. Setting: Prospective multicenter cohort study. Patients: Critically ill patients admitted in ICU with shock and requiring mechanical ventilation within 48 hours. Intervention: None. Measurements and Main Results: Two-thousand three-hundred seventy-four patients were included. Their median body weight variations increased from 0.4kg (interquartile range, 0-4.8kg) on day 3 to 3kg (interquartile range, -0.4 to 8.2kg) on day 7. Categories of body weight variations were defined depending on body weight variations interquartiles: weight loss, no weight gain, moderate and severe weight gain. A severe weight gain tended to be associated with death at days 5 and 6 (day 5: subdistribution hazard ratio, 1.27; 95% CI, 0.99-1.63; p = 0.06 and day 6: subdistribution hazard ratio, 1.43; 95% CI, 1.08-1.89; p = 0.01), a weight loss tended to be associated with bedsore, and a severe gain between at days 5 and 6 was associated with ventilator-associated pneumonia. Any body weight variations were associated with an increased length of stay. Conclusions: In survivors at day 3, body weight variations during the first days of ICU stay might be a clinically relevant tool to prevent weight gain but also for prognostication of 30-day mortality, occurrence of ventilator-associated pneumonia, and occurrence of prolonged ICU stay.

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