Title: Pediatric CRRT: Outcome
1Pediatric CRRT Outcome
2Ronco et al. Lancet 2000 351 26-30
3Ronco et al. Lancet 2000 351 26-30
- Conclusions
- Minimum UF rates should reach at least 35
ml/kg/hr - (2000ml/1.73m2/hr when adapted for children)
- Survivors in all their groups had lower BUNs than
non-survivors prior to commencement of
hemofiltration - Begs the question does early CRRT effect outcome?
4Pediatric Acute Renal FailureIdeal Study Design
- Prospective protocol driven entry criteria to
ensure that patients and their respective disease
receive similar treatment - Control for severity of illness, primary and
co-morbid diseases - Adequate power to detect effect of an
intervention on or an association of a clinical
variable with outcome
5Pediatric Acute Renal FailureIdeal Study Design
- Prospective protocol driven entry criteria to
ensure that patients and their respective disease
receive similar treatment --- Do not exist! - Control for severity of illness, primary and
co-morbid diseases --- Some information - Adequate power to detect effect of an
intervention on or an association of a clinical
variable with outcome --- Do not exist!
6Renal Replacement Therapy in the PICUPediatric
Outcome Literature
- Few pediatric studies (all single center) use
severity of illness measure to evaluate outcomes
in pediatric RRT - Lane noted that mortality was greater after bone
marrow transplant who had gt 10 fluid overload at
the time of HD initiation - Smoyer2 found higher mortality in patients on
pressors - Faragson3 found PRISM to be a poor outcome
predictor in patients treated with HD - Zobel4 demonstrated that children who received
CRRT with worse illness severity by PRISM score
had increased mortality - Did not stratify by modality
1. Bone Marrow Transplant 13613-7, 1994 2. JASN
61401-9, 1995 3. Pediatr Nephrol 7703-7,
1994 4. Child Nephrol Urol 1014-7, 1990
7Pediatric ARF Modality and Survival
Plt0.01
Plt0.01
Survival
Bunchman TE et al Ped Neph 161067-1071, 2001
8Pediatric ARF Modality and Survival
- Patient survival on pressors (35) lower than
without pressors (89) (plt0.01) - Lower survival seen in CRRT than in patients who
received HD for all disease states
Bunchman TE et al Ped Neph 161067-1071, 2001
9CRRT and Outcome in Children
- Retrospective review of all patients who received
CVVH(D) in the Texas Childrens Hospital PICU
from February 1996 through September 1998 (32
months) - Pre-CVVH initiation data
- Age
- Primary disease leading to need for CVVH
- Co-morbid diseases
- Reason for CVVH
- Fluid intake (Fluid In) from PICU admission to
CVVH initiation - Fluid output (Fluid Out) from PICU admission to
CVVH initiation - GFR (Schwartz formula) at CVVH initiation
Goldstein SL et al Pediatrics 2001
Jun107(6)1309-12
10CRRT and Outcome in Children
- PRISM scores at PICU admission and CVVH
initiation calculated by same nurse - PICU Course Data
- Maximum number of pressors used
- Pressors completely weaned (y/n)
- Mean Airway Pressure (Paw) at CVVH initiation and
termination - ICU length of stay (days)
- CVVH complications
- Outcome (death or survival)
Goldstein SL et al Pediatrics 2001 1071309-12
11CRRT and Outcome in Children
- Survival curve demonstrates that nearly 75 of
deaths occurred less than 25 days into the ICU
course
Goldstein SL et al Pediatrics 2001 1071309-12
12CRRT and Outcome in Children
- Lesser FO at CVVH (D) initiation was associated
with improved outcome (p0.03) - Lesser FO at CVVH (D) initiation was also
associated with improved outcome when sample was
adjusted for severity of illness (p0.03
multiple regression analysis)
Goldstein SL et al Pediatrics 2001 1071309-12
13Fluid Overload as a Risk Factor
N113
p0.02 p0.01
Foland et al, CCM 2004 321771-1776
14Kaplan-Meier survival estimates, by percentage
fluid overload category
Gillespie et al, Pediatr Nephrol (2004)
191394-1999
15Fluid Overload as a Risk Factor
N 77
Gillespie et al, Pediatr Nephrol 2004
191394-1999
16The Evolution of Idea to Practice Paradigm
Registry
Single center study
Randomized Trial
17The Prospective Pediatric CRRT (ppCRRT) Registry
- No single pediatric center cares for enough CRRT
patients annually to analyze the effect of more
than a few variables on patient outcome - Mitigate geographical and institutional effects
on - Patient demographics
- CRRT practice patterns
- SHARE INFORMATION
- Generate hypotheses for future RCTs
18ppCRRT Experience
- First patient enrolled on 1/1/01
- 370 patients entered into database as of 07/12/05
- Currently 13 active participating pediatric
centers
- Texas Childrens
- Boston Childrens
- Seattle Childrens
- UAB
- University of Michigan
- Mercy Childrens, KC
- Egleston Childrens, Atlanta
- All Childrens, St. Petersburg
- DC Childrens
- Columbus Childrens
- Packard Childrens, Palo Alto
- DeVos Childrens, Grand Rapids
- Cleveland Clinic
19Patient Demographics
- Newborn to 25 years
- 59 males
- Weights 1.3 160kg (mean 33.5 kg)
- Mean 6.5 days in ICU prior to CRRT
- (range 0 135 days, median 2)
- Modality
- CVVH (33)
- CVVHD (54)
- CVVHDF (13)
20ppCRRT Data Size Distribution
21ppCRRT MODS Data
22ppCRRT MODS Data
- BASELINE DEMOGRAPHICS
- 157 patients entered (1/1/2001 to 5/31/04)
- 116 with MODS (2 organs involved)
- Mean age 8.5 6.8 years (2 days to 25.1 years)
- Mean weight 33.7 25.1 kg (1.9 to 160 kg)
- Median 3 ICU days prior to CRRT initiation
- Range 0 to 103 days
- 67less than 7 days
Goldstein SL et al Kidney International 2005
23ppCRRT MODS Data Clinical Variables
Goldstein SL et al Kidney International 2005
24ppCRRT MODS Data Other Analyses
- 77 of non-survivors die within 3 weeks of ICU
admission - Survival rates similar by CRRT modality (H 57),
(DF 53), (HD 50) - Survival rates similar for patients on 0-1
(53), 2 (54) or 3 (39) pressors - Survival rates better for patients with lt20 FO
(59) versus gt20 FO (35) at CRRT initiation
(plt0.001)
Goldstein SL et al Kidney International 2005