Bottom line: Prolonged resuscitative efforts were observed to be associated with increased likelihood of return of spontaneous circulation and survival to discharge; this data might provide clinical guidance in determining when to stop resuscitation efforts.
Citation: Goldberger ZD, Chan PS, Berg RA, et al. Duration of resuscitation efforts and survival after in-hospital cardiac arrest: an observational study. Lancet. 2012;380:1473-1481.
Early Sepsis Intervention Strategies Decrease Mortality, Length of Stay, and Cost
Clinical question: For patients with sepsis or septic shock, what is the impact of a real-time comprehensive continuous quality-improvement (QI) initiative on in-hospital mortality, morbidity, and healthcare resource utilization in community and tertiary-care hospitals in the U.S.?
Background: Multiple single-center trials have demonstrated that early sepsis intervention strategies (early goal-directed therapy, resuscitation bundles) improve in-hospital mortality. Little is known about the effectiveness of incorporating these strategies into a real-time continuous QI initiative and implementing interventions across multiple sites simultaneously.
Study design: Pre-post at some sites and concurrent implementation design at other sites.
Setting: Five community and six-tertiary care U.S. hospitals.
Synopsis: The GENeralized Early Sepsis Intervention Strategies (GENESIS) project was a CQI initiative that combined several QI concepts with validated early sepsis interventions known as resuscitation bundles (RB). Continuous QI was implemented on patients with severe sepsis or septic shock in both before and after designs (eight hospitals), and in concurrent designs (three hospitals). The control group was comprised of historical controls treated before GENESIS and patients with incomplete implementation of RB, totaling 1,554 patients. The treatment group included patients treated after GENESIS and those with complete RB compliance, totaling 4,801 patients.
Compared with the control group, patients in the treatment group had a 33% decreased risk of in-hospital mortality (RR 0.67, 95% CI 0.63-0.72), an absolute decrease in hospital length of stay (LOS) by 5.1 days (20.7 days vs. 15.6 days, P<0.001) and a $47,923 reduction in total hospital charges (P<0.001). Limitations included the study design (not a prospective randomized trial), and the possibility of other concurrent unmeasured quality initiatives taking place at the study sites, which might have contributed to improved outcomes.
Bottom line: Early sepsis intervention strategies in the form of a comprehensive continuous QI initiative can decrease mortality, hospital LOS, and cost in both tertiary-care and community hospitals.
Citation: Cannon CM, Holthaus CV, Zubrow MT, et al. The GENESIS project (GENeralized Early Sepsis Intervention Strategies): a multicenter quality improvement collaborative. J Intensive Care Med. 2012; Aug 17. doi:10.1177/0885066612453025.
Hypoglycemia Associated with Increased Mortality in the Critically Ill
Clinical question: Is hypoglycemia associated with mortality in critically ill patients?
Background: Initial studies suggested that intensive glucose control reduces mortality in surgical ICU patients and reduces morbidity in medical ICU patients, but further studies have not supported these findings. Recent literature shows conflicting results on the effects of intense glucose control in critically ill patients.
Study design: Post-hoc analysis of the NICE-SUGAR study database.
Setting: ICUs in 42 hospitals in Australia, New Zealand, and Canada.
Synopsis: The NICE-SUGAR study was a multicenter trial that randomized 6,104 ICU patients to intensive (glucose 80 to 108 mg/dL) or conventional glucose control (≤180 mg/dL). Patients were followed for 90 days or until death, with death being the primary end point. Severe hypoglycemia (<40 mg/dL) was recorded in 6.8% of patients in the intensive glucose control group versus 0.5% in the conventional group. The study showed that intensive glucose control was associated with increased mortality among adult ICU patients.
Using the NICE-SUGAR database, the authors conducted a Cox regression analysis to examine the associations between hypoglycemia and death. A total of 2,714 patients had moderate hypoglycemia (glucose 41 to 70 mg/dL), and 223 patients had severe hypoglycemia. The hazard ratio for mortality was 1.41 (95% CI 1.21-1.62, P<0.001) for patients with moderate hypoglycemia and 2.10 (95% CI 1.59-2.77, P<0.001) for severe hypoglycemia, compared to patients without hypoglycemia.