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result(s) for
"Almeida, Guacyra M. B."
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Effects of dapagliflozin on urinary output, fluid balance, and biochemistry in critically ill patients: a post-hoc secondary analysis of the DEFENDER trial
2025
Background
Sodium-glucose cotransport-2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) have established benefits in diabetes mellitus, heart failure, and chronic kidney disease, but their physiological effects during critical illness remain unclear. We explored whether dapagliflozin affected urinary output, fluid balance, and other physiological parameters in critically ill patients with acute organ dysfunction.
Methods
This secondary analysis of the DEFENDER trial included 401 critically ill patients with acute organ dysfunction randomized to receive dapagliflozin 10 mg daily or standard care. We analyzed urinary output, fluid balance, electrolytes, acid–base status, glycemia, and vasopressor requirements over the first five days using Bayesian models.
Results
Dapagliflozin progressively increased urinary output (day 5: + 157 mL/day, 95% CrI -90 to 386, probability 90%) and decreased fluid balance (day 5: -290 mL/day, 95% CrI -564 to -27, probability 98%). Furosemide use was lower in the dapagliflozin group (overall -3%, 95% CrI -7% to 1%, probability 90%). Dapagliflozin had minimal effects on creatinine and electrolytes but was associated with progressive small decreases in pH (day 5: -0.02, probability 96%). Maximum glucose levels were consistently lower with dapagliflozin (-9 mg/dL overall, probability 83%). Norepinephrine requirements showed a time-dependent increase in the dapagliflozin group, with the expected dose difference reaching 0.034 mcg/kg/min by day 5 (probability 94%), and heterogeneity analysis revealed larger effects in patients with sepsis or on mechanical ventilation.
Conclusion
This exploratory analysis suggests dapagliflozin may enhance diuresis and reduce loop diuretic requirements in critically ill patients, potentially at the cost of increased vasopressor needs. Glucose levels were likely slightly lower with dapagliflozin. Given the study's limitations and heterogeneous treatment effects, these findings should be considered hypothesis-generating pending confirmation in prospective trials.
Journal Article
Attributable mortality due to nosocomial sepsis in Brazilian hospitals: a case–control study
by
Nassar, Antonio Paulo
,
Arruda, Micheli C
,
Taniguchi, Leandro U
in
Antibiotics
,
Epidemiology
,
Hospitals
2023
BackgroundNosocomial sepsis is a major healthcare issue, but there are few data on estimates of its attributable mortality. We aimed to estimate attributable mortality fraction (AF) due to nosocomial sepsis.MethodsMatched 1:1 case–control study in 37 hospitals in Brazil. Hospitalized patients in participating hospitals were included. Cases were hospital non-survivors and controls were hospital survivors, which were matched by admission type and date of discharge. Exposure was defined as occurrence of nosocomial sepsis, defined as antibiotic prescription plus presence of organ dysfunction attributed to sepsis without an alternative reason for organ failure; alternative definitions were explored. Main outcome measurement was nosocomial sepsis-attributable fractions, estimated using inversed-weight probabilities methods using generalized mixed model considering time-dependency of sepsis occurrence.Results3588 patients from 37 hospitals were included. Mean age was 63 years and 48.8% were female at birth. 470 sepsis episodes occurred in 388 patients (311 in cases and 77 in control group), with pneumonia being the most common source of infection (44.3%). Average AF for sepsis mortality was 0.076 (95% CI 0.068–0.084) for medical admissions; 0.043 (95% CI 0.032–0.055) for elective surgical admissions; and 0.036 (95% CI 0.017–0.055) for emergency surgeries. In a time-dependent analysis, AF for sepsis rose linearly for medical admissions, reaching close to 0.12 on day 28; AF plateaued earlier for other admission types (0.04 for elective surgery and 0.07 for urgent surgery). Alternative sepsis definitions yield different estimates.ConclusionThe impact of nosocomial sepsis on outcome is more pronounced in medical admissions and tends to increase over time. The results, however, are sensitive to sepsis definitions.
Journal Article