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Feasibility of conservative fluid administration and deresuscitation compared with usual care in critical illness: the Role of Active Deresuscitation After Resuscitation-2 (RADAR-2) randomised clinical trial

Silversides, Jonathan A.; McMullan, Ross; Emerson, Lydia M.; Bradbury, Ian; Bannard-Smith, Jonathan; Szakmany, Tamas; Trinder, John; Rostron, Anthony J.; Johnston, Paul; Ferguson, Andrew J.; Boyle, Andrew J.; Blackwood, Bronagh; Marshall, John C.; McAuley, Daniel F.

Authors

Jonathan A. Silversides

Ross McMullan

Ian Bradbury

Jonathan Bannard-Smith

Tamas Szakmany

John Trinder

Anthony J. Rostron

Paul Johnston

Andrew J. Ferguson

Andrew J. Boyle

Bronagh Blackwood

John C. Marshall

Daniel F. McAuley



Abstract

Purpose
Fluid overload is common in critical illness and is associated with mortality. This study investigated the feasibility of a randomised trial comparing conservative fluid administration and deresuscitation (active removal of accumulated fluid using diuretics or ultrafiltration) with usual care in critical illness.

Methods
Open-label, parallel-group, allocation-concealed randomised clinical feasibility trial. Mechanically ventilated adult patients expected to require critical care beyond the next calendar day were enrolled between 24 and 48 h following admission to the intensive care unit (ICU). Patients were randomised to either a 2-stage fluid strategy comprising conservative fluid administration and, if fluid overload was present, active deresuscitation, or usual care. The primary endpoint was fluid balance in the 24 h up to the start of study day 3. Secondary endpoints included cumulative fluid balance, mortality, and duration of mechanical ventilation.

Results
One hundred and eighty patients were randomised. After withdrawal of 1 patient, 89 patients assigned to the intervention were compared with 90 patients assigned to the usual care group. The mean plus standard deviation (SD) 24-h fluid balance up to study day 3 was lower in the intervention group (− 840 ± 1746 mL) than the usual care group (+ 130 ± 1401 mL; P < 0.01). Cumulative fluid balance was lower in the intervention group at days 3 and 5. Overall, clinical outcomes did not differ significantly between the two groups, although the point estimate for 30-day mortality favoured the usual care group [intervention arm: 19 of 90 (21.6%) versus usual care: 14 of 89 (15.6%), P = 0.32]. Baseline imbalances between groups and lack of statistical power limit interpretation of clinical outcomes.

Conclusions
A strategy of conservative fluid administration and active deresuscitation is feasible, reduces fluid balance compared with usual care, and may cause benefit or harm. In view of wide variations in contemporary clinical practice, large, adequately powered trials investigating the clinical effectiveness of conservative fluid strategies in critically ill patients are warranted.

Citation

Silversides, J. A., McMullan, R., Emerson, L. M., Bradbury, I., Bannard-Smith, J., Szakmany, T., …McAuley, D. F. (2022). Feasibility of conservative fluid administration and deresuscitation compared with usual care in critical illness: the Role of Active Deresuscitation After Resuscitation-2 (RADAR-2) randomised clinical trial. Intensive Care Medicine, 48(2), 190-200. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-021-06596-8

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 27, 2021
Online Publication Date Dec 16, 2021
Publication Date 2022-02
Deposit Date Jun 2, 2023
Journal Intensive Care Medicine
Print ISSN 0342-4642
Publisher Springer
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 48
Issue 2
Pages 190-200
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-021-06596-8
Keywords Critical illness, Fluid therapy, Water–electrolyte balance, Infusions, Intravenous, Diuretics, Oedema, Deresuscitation
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/3116159