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14
result(s) for
"De Schryver, Nicolas"
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Mean arterial pressure after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (METAPHORE): study protocol for a multicentre controlled trial with blinded primary outcome assessor
by
Delbove, Agathe
,
Berge, Asael
,
Marchalot, Antoine
in
Arterial Pressure - physiology
,
Blood Pressure
,
Brain Injuries
2025
IntroductionOut-of-hospital cardiac arrest is a public health concern with a high mortality rate. Hypoxic ischaemic brain injury is the primary cause of death in patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) after return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). Several systemic factors, such as hypotension, can exacerbate brain injuries. International guidelines recommend targeting a mean arterial pressure (MAP) of at least 65 mm Hg. Several observational studies suggest that a higher MAP may be associated with better outcomes, but no randomised trials have shown an effect of higher MAP. The ongoing METAPHORE (mean arterial pressure after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest) trial aims to compare a standard MAP threshold (MAP ≥65 mm Hg) with a high MAP threshold (MAP ≥90 mm Hg) to evaluate whether implementing a higher MAP threshold can improve neurological outcomes in patients admitted to ICU after cardiac arrest.Methods and analysisMETAPHORE is a randomised, controlled, multicentre, open-label trial with a blinded primary outcome assessor, comparing two parallel groups of patients 18 years of age or older, receiving invasive mechanical ventilation for coma defined by a Glasgow Coma Score ≤8/15 after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and sustained ROSC. Eligible patients are randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to either a MAP target threshold of 65 mm Hg or higher throughout the ICU stay (control group) or a MAP target threshold of 90 mm Hg or higher during the first 24 hours after randomisation, followed by 65 mm Hg or higher for the remainder of the ICU stay (intervention group). Both groups receive the same general care concerning post-cardiac arrest syndrome management according to international guidelines. The primary endpoint is the proportion of patients with a favourable neurological outcome as defined by a modified Rankin scale (mRS) of 0 to 3 measured on day 180 after inclusion by a psychologist blinded to the allocation of the intervention. Secondary outcomes are the proportion of patients alive at ICU and hospital discharge, at day 28 and day 180; proportion of patients alive at ICU discharge with a mRS of 0 to 3; the EuroQOL-5D-5L at day 180; the Clinical Frailty Scale at day 180; the number of ICU-free days, ventilator-free days, catecholamine-free days and renal replacement therapy-free days at day 28; the proportion of patients with acute kidney injury stage 3 and need for renal replacement therapy within ICU stay and proportion of patients with persistent need for renal replacement therapy at ICU discharge; and safety outcomes (cardiovascular, neurological, cutaneous, digestive and haemorrhagic complications within 7 days after inclusion). Subgroup analyses are planned according to initial cardiac arrest rhythm (shockable or non-shockable), chronic hypertension and Cardiac Arrest Hospital Prognosis score. Outcomes will be analysed on an intention-to-treat basis. Recruitment started in October 2024 in 27 French ICUs, and a sample of 1380 patients is expected by October 2027.Ethics and disseminationThe study received approval from the national ethics review board on 8 February 2024 (Comité de Protection des Personnes Sud-Est V – 2023-A00257-38). Patients are included after informed consent has been obtained either from a proxy or through an emergency procedure. Results will be submitted for publication in peer-reviewed journals.Trial registration numberClinicalTrials.gov: NCT05486884.
Journal Article
Cardiogenic Shock in a Hemodialyzed Patient on Flecainide: Treatment with Intravenous Fat Emulsion, Extracorporeal Cardiac Life Support, and CytoSorb® Hemoadsorption
by
Hantson, Philippe
,
Dechamps, Mélanie
,
Haufroid, Vincent
in
Blood pressure
,
Cardiac arrhythmia
,
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation
2019
A 67-year-old woman with a history of end-stage renal disease on hemodialysis received a therapeutic dose (150 mg daily) of flecainide for three weeks. She was admitted to the Emergency Department for malaise and dizziness, and the electrocardiogram revealed ventricular tachycardia treated by amiodarone. Hemodynamic condition remained stable, and the toxicity of flecainide was initially not suspected until she developed within 8 hours a cardiogenic shock requiring vasopressors. The patient then received sodium bicarbonate (300 mmol) and dobutamine but experienced cardiac arrest two hours later. The administration of intravenous fat emulsion (IFE) was associated with return of spontaneous circulation, but there was a relapse of cardiovascular shock at the end of IFE infusion. The patient was placed on extracorporeal cardiac life support (ECLS), continuous hemofiltration, and hemoadsorption using the CytoSorb® cartridge. Serial determinations of serum flecainide concentration were obtained during the course of hemoadsorption, with a terminal half-life of 3.7 h during the first four hours and a global plasma clearance of 40.3 ml/min over the first 22 hours. The weaning of ECLS was possible on day 7. Intravenous fat emulsion infusion was followed by a significant increase in serum flecainide concentration. In addition, while conventional techniques of extrarenal epuration usually appear as poorly effective for flecainide removal, a mean plasma clearance of 40.3 ml/min was observed using the hemoadsorption technique based on CytoSorb® cartridge. However, the impact on the clinical course was probably extremely modest in comparison with ECLS.
Journal Article
Early hyperlactatemia predicts pancreatic fistula after surgery
by
Castanares-Zapatero, Diego
,
Laterre, Pierre-François
,
Wittebole, Xavier
in
Adult
,
Aged
,
Aged, 80 and over
2015
Background
Postoperative pancreatic fistula (POPF) is a major complication after pancreatic surgery and results from an impaired healing of the pancreatic enteric anastomosis. Whether perioperative hemodynamic fluid management aiming to provide an adequate tissue perfusion could influence the occurrence of POPF is unknown. Serum lactate level is a well-recognized marker of decreased tissue perfusion and is known to be associated with higher morbidity and mortality in various postoperative settings. We aimed to determine in a retrospective high-volume center’s cohort whether postoperative hyperlactatemia could predict POPF occurrence.
Method
We conducted a retrospective analysis of 96 consecutive patients admitted in the intensive care unit (ICU) after pancreaticoduodenectomy or distal pancreatectomy. Univariate analysis was conducted to compare lactate levels at 6 h between patients evolving with
versus
without POPF. A logistic regression model was developed and included potential confounding factors.
Results
POPF occurred in 28 patients (29 %). Serum lactate level 6 h after admission was significantly higher in the POPF group (2.8 mmol/L [95 % confidence interval (CI): 2.1–3.5]
versus
1.8 mmol/L [95 % CI: 1.8–2.4],
p
-value = 0.04) whereas it did not differ at ICU admission or at 12 h. Despite similar cumulative fluid balance, fluid intake and vasopressor use, hyperlactatemia > 2.5 mmol/L (Odds ratio (OR): 3.58; 95 % CI: 1.22–10.48;
p
-value = 0.020) and red blood cells transfusion (OR: 1.24; 95 % CI: 1.03–1.49;
p
-value = 0.022) were found to be independent predictive factors of POPF occurrence.
Conclusion
In patients undergoing partial pancreatectomy, hyperlactatemia measured 6 h after ICU admission is a predictive factor for the occurrence of POPF. Inflammatory changes after surgery may account for this observation and should be further evaluated.
Journal Article
Acute Ventricular Wall Thickening: Sepsis, Thrombotic Microangiopathy, or Myocarditis?
2015
Background. Acute myocardial oedema has been documented in experimental models of ischemia-reperfusion injury or sepsis and is usually investigated by magnetic resonance imaging. Purpose. We describe a case of acute ventricular wall thickening documented by echocardiography in a patient developing sepsis and thrombotic microangiopathy. Case Description. A 40-year-old woman, with a history of mixed connective tissue disease, was admitted with laryngeal oedema and fever. She developed Streptococcus pneumoniae septicaemia and subsequent laboratory abnormalities were consistent with a thrombotic microangiopathy. Echocardiography revealed an impressive diffuse thickening of the whole myocardium (interventricular septum 18 mm; posterior wall 16 mm) with diffuse hypokinesia and markedly reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (31%). There was also a moderate pericardial effusion. Echocardiography was normal two months before. The patient died from acute heart failure. Macroscopic and microscopic examination of the heart suggested that the ventricular wall thickening was induced by oedematous changes, together with an excess of inflammatory cells. Conclusion. Acute ventricular wall thickening that corresponded to myocardial oedema as a first hypothesis was observed at echocardiography during the course of septicaemia complicated by thrombotic microangiopathy.
Journal Article
Safety, efficacy, and pharmacokinetics of gremubamab (MEDI3902), an anti-Pseudomonas aeruginosa bispecific human monoclonal antibody, in P. aeruginosa-colonised, mechanically ventilated intensive care unit patients: a randomised controlled trial
2022
Background
Ventilator-associated pneumonia caused by
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
(PA) in hospitalised patients is associated with high mortality. The effectiveness of the bivalent, bispecific mAb MEDI3902 (gremubamab) in preventing PA nosocomial pneumonia was assessed in PA-colonised mechanically ventilated subjects.
Methods
EVADE (NCT02696902) was a phase 2, randomised, parallel-group, double-blind, placebo-controlled study in Europe, Turkey, Israel, and the USA. Subjects ≥ 18 years old, mechanically ventilated, tracheally colonised with PA, and without new-onset pneumonia, were randomised (1:1:1) to MEDI3902 500, 1500 mg (single intravenous dose), or placebo. The primary efficacy endpoint was the incidence of nosocomial PA pneumonia through 21 days post-dose in MEDI3902 1500 mg versus placebo, determined by an independent adjudication committee.
Results
Even if the initial sample size was not reached because of low recruitment, 188 subjects were randomised (MEDI3902 500/1500 mg:
n
= 16/87; placebo:
n
= 85) between 13 April 2016 and 17 October 2019. Out of these, 184 were dosed (MEDI3902 500/1500 mg:
n
= 16/85; placebo:
n
= 83), comprising the modified intent-to-treat set. Enrolment in the 500 mg arm was discontinued due to pharmacokinetic data demonstrating low MEDI3902 serum concentrations. Subsequently, enrolled subjects were randomised (1:1) to MEDI3902 1500 mg or placebo. PA pneumonia was confirmed in 22.4% (
n
= 19/85) of MEDI3902 1500 mg recipients and in 18.1% (
n
= 15/83) of placebo recipients (relative risk reduction [RRR]: − 23.7%; 80% confidence interval [CI] − 83.8%, 16.8%;
p
= 0.49). At 21 days post-1500 mg dose, the mean (standard deviation) serum MEDI3902 concentration was 9.46 (7.91) μg/mL, with 80.6% (
n
= 58/72) subjects achieving concentrations > 1.7 μg/mL, a level associated with improved outcome in animal models. Treatment-emergent adverse event incidence was similar between groups.
Conclusions
The bivalent, bispecific monoclonal antibody MEDI3902 (gremubamab) did not reduce PA nosocomial pneumonia incidence in PA-colonised mechanically ventilated subjects.
Trial registration
Registered on Clinicaltrials.gov (
NCT02696902
) on 11th February 2016 and on EudraCT (
2015-001706-34
) on 7th March 2016.
Journal Article
Severe Rhabdomyolysis Associated with Simvastatin and Role of Ciprofloxacin and Amlodipine Coadministration
2015
Simvastatin is among the most commonly used prescription medications for cholesterol reduction and the most common statin-related adverse drug reaction is skeletal muscle toxicity. Multiple factors have been shown to influence simvastatin-induced myopathy. In addition to age, gender, ethnicity, genetic predisposition, and dose, drug-drug interactions play a major role. This is particularly true for drugs that are extensively metabolized by cytochrome P450 (CYP)3A4. We describe a particularly severe case of rhabdomyolysis after the introduction of ciprofloxacin, a weak CYP3A4 inhibitor, in a patient who previously tolerated the simvastatin-amlodipine combination.
Journal Article
Asymptomatic Late Migration of an Atrial Pacemaker Lead into the Right Lung
2014
This report illustrates an unusual case of asymptomatic late cardiac perforation by an atrial pacemaker lead into the right lung. In the present case, the lead was explanted by simple manual traction through the device pocket without any complications.
Journal Article
Pharmacokinetic profiles of intravenous versus subcutaneous administration of low molecular weight heparin for thromboprophylaxis in critically ill patients: A randomized controlled trial
by
Serck, Nicolas
,
Laterre, Pierre-François
,
Wittebole, Xavier
in
Anti-Xa activity
,
Anticoagulants
,
Critical care
2022
Low molecular weight heparins (LMWH) are recommended for thromboprophylaxis in ICU patients but often fail to reach adequate peak anti-Xa activity.
To compare the pharmacokinetic profiles of intravenous (IV) versus subcutaneous (SC) route of administration of LMWH.
This was a prospective, monocentric, randomized trial. Patients were randomized to the IV route of administration with a 4-h infusion of nadroparin 3800 IU or to the SC route of administration. Randomization was stratified according to the need for vasopressor or not. Anti-Xa activity was measured at baseline, and at 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 12 and 24 h after the administration was started.
Sixty patients were included, of whom 30 were randomized to the IV group and 30 to the SC route. Pharmacokinetic profiles were significantly different. Mean peak anti-Xa activity was 0.38 IU/ml in the IV group vs 0.20 IU/ml in the SC group (p < 0.001). Trough values and AUC (0-24 h) were similar in both groups. Pharmacokinetic profiles were similar whether patients received vasopressors or not.
The IV route of administration with a 4-h infusion lead to a significantly higher peak anti-Xa activity without affecting trough value or the AUC (0-24 h). Whether the IV administration of LMWH might improve the efficacy of thromboprophylaxis requires further research.
Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04982055, retrospectively registered 08 July 2021, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04982055?cond=NCT04982055&draw=2&rank=1
•The 4-h IV administration of nadroparin lead to a higher peak anti-Xa activity than the SC administration.•Peak anti-Xa activity is not correlated with vasopressor use.•Body mass index is associated with lower peak anti-Xa activities.
Journal Article
Ventricular septal defect without tamponade after penetrating trauma
by
Pierard, Sophie
,
Olivier Van Caenegem
,
De Schryver, Nicolas
in
Case reports
,
Heart
,
Intensive care
2018
A 46-year-old man presented after having stabbed himself with a knife in the upper abdomen a day earlier. Thoraco-abdominal computed tomography and a transthoracic echocardiography were performed and showed a small pericardial effusion without other abnormality. As the patient was asymptomatic, conservative management was decided. Two days after admission, hedeveloped a loud systolic cardiac murmur, and a repeat echocardiography showed a basal ventricular septal defect (VSD) with a signifcant left-to-right shunt.
Journal Article