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result(s) for
"Martin-Lefevre, Laurent"
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Grief Symptoms in Relatives Who Experienced Organ Donation Requests in the ICU
by
Thuong, Marie
,
Mezher, Chaouki
,
Galon, Marion
in
Adult
,
Adult Children - psychology
,
Blood & organ donations
2018
Studies show that the quality of end-of-life communication and care have a significant impact on the living long after the death of a relative and have been implicated in the burden of psychological symptoms after the ICU experience. In the case of organ donation, the patient's relatives are centrally involved in the decision-making process; yet, few studies have examined the impact of the quality of communication on the burden of psychological symptoms after death.
To assess the experience of the organ donation process and grief symptoms in relatives of brain-dead patients who discussed organ donation in the ICU.
We conducted a multicenter longitudinal study in 28 ICUs in France. Participants were the relatives of brain-dead patients who were approached to discuss organ donation. Relatives were followed-up by phone at three time points: at 1 month, to complete a questionnaire describing their experience of the organ donation process; at 3 months, to complete the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and the Impact of Event Scale-Revised; and at 9 months, to complete the Impact of Event Scale-Revised and the Inventory of Complicated Grief.
In total, 202 relatives of 202 patients were included, of whom 158 consented to and 44 refused organ donation. Interviews were conducted at 1, 3, and 9 months with 78%, 68%, and 58% of relatives, respectively. The overall experience of the organ donation process was significantly more burdensome for relatives of nondonors. They were more dissatisfied with communication (27% vs. 10%; P = 0.021), more often shocked by the request (65% vs. 19%; P < 0.0001), and more often found the decision difficult (53% vs. 27%; P = 0.017). However, there were no significant differences in grief symptoms measured at 3 and 9 months between the two groups. Understanding of brain death was associated with grief symptoms; our results show a higher prevalence of complicated grief symptoms among relatives who did not understand the brain death process than among those who did (75% vs. 46.1%; P = 0.026).
Experience of the organ donation process varied between relatives of donor versus nondonor patients, with relatives of nondonors experiencing lower-quality communication, but the decision was not associated with subsequent grief symptoms. Importantly, understanding of brain death is a key element of the organ donation process for relatives.
Journal Article
Initiation Strategies for Renal-Replacement Therapy in the Intensive Care Unit
by
Tubach, Florence
,
Martin-Lefevre, Laurent
,
Lautrette, Alexandre
in
Acidosis
,
Acute Kidney Injury - mortality
,
Acute Kidney Injury - physiopathology
2016
This multicenter randomized trial compared strategies of early and delayed renal-replacement therapy in patients with severe acute kidney injury. There was no significant difference in mortality, the primary outcome, between the study groups.
Acute kidney injury is a common condition among patients in the intensive care unit
1
–
4
and is associated with high morbidity and mortality.
2
,
5
–
8
Renal-replacement therapy is the cornerstone of the management of severe acute kidney injury. Many studies have focused on methods of renal-replacement therapy,
5
,
6
,
8
,
9
but the issue of when to initiate the therapy in the absence of a potentially life-threatening complication directly related to renal failure remains a subject of debate. Indirect evidence has suggested that early renal-replacement therapy could confer a survival benefit.
10
–
12
However, two observational studies reported high survival rates among . . .
Journal Article
Impact of renal replacement therapy strategy on beta-lactam plasma concentrations: the BETAKIKI study—an ancillary study of a randomized controlled trial
by
Titeca-Beauport, Dimitri
,
Tubach, Florence
,
Mahjoub, Khaoula
in
Antibiotics
,
Clinical trials
,
Hemodialysis
2023
BackgroundSepsis prognosis correlates with antibiotic adequacy at the early phase. This adequacy is dependent on antibacterial spectrum, bacterial resistance profile and antibiotic dosage. Optimal efficacy of beta-lactams mandates concentrations above the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the targeted bacteria for the longest time possible over the day. Septic acute kidney injury (AKI) is the most common AKI syndrome in ICU and often mandates renal replacement therapy (RRT) initiation. Both severe AKI and RRT may increase outside target antibiotic concentrations and ultimately alter patient’s prognosis.Patients and methodsThis is a secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial that compared an early RRT initiation strategy with a delayed one in 620 critically ill patients undergoing severe AKI (defined by KDIGO 3). We compared beta-lactam trough concentrations between the two RRT initiation strategies. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients with sufficient trough plasma concentration of beta-lactams defined by trough concentration above 4 times the MIC. We hypothesized that early initiation of RRT could be associated with an insufficient antibiotic plasma trough concentration compared to patients allocated to the delayed strategy.ResultsOne hundred and twelve patients were included: 53 in the early group and 59 in the delayed group. Eighty-three patients (74%) had septic shock on inclusion. Trough beta-lactam plasma concentration was above 4 times the MIC breakpoint in 80.4% (n = 90) of patients of the whole population, without differences between the early and the delayed groups (79.2% vs. 81.4%, respectively, p = 0.78). On multivariate analysis, the presence of septic shock and a higher mean arterial pressure were significantly associated with a greater probability of adequate antibiotic trough concentration [OR 3.95 (1.14;13.64), p = 0.029 and OR 1.05 (1.01;1.10), p = 0.013, respectively). Evolution of procalcitonin level and catecholamine-free days as well as mortality did not differ whether beta-lactam trough concentration was above 4 times the MIC or not.ConclusionsIn this secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial, renal replacement therapy initiation strategy did not significantly influence plasma trough concentrations of beta-lactams in ICU patients with severe AKI. Presence of septic shock on inclusion was the main variable associated with a sufficient beta-lactam concentration.Trial registration: The AKIKI trial was registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (Identifier: NCT01932190) before the inclusion of the first patient.
Journal Article
Continuous renal replacement therapy versus intermittent hemodialysis as first modality for renal replacement therapy in severe acute kidney injury: a secondary analysis of AKIKI and IDEAL-ICU studies
by
Barbar, Saber
,
Martin-Lefevre, Laurent
,
Pons, Bertrand
in
Acute kidney injury
,
Acute Kidney Injury - therapy
,
Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy
2022
Background
Intermittent hemodialysis (IHD) and continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) are the two main RRT modalities in patients with severe acute kidney injury (AKI). Meta-analyses conducted more than 10 years ago did not show survival difference between these two modalities. As the quality of RRT delivery has improved since then, we aimed to reassess whether the choice of IHD or CRRT as first modality affects survival of patients with severe AKI.
Methods
This is a secondary analysis of two multicenter randomized controlled trials (AKIKI and IDEAL-ICU) that compared an early RRT initiation strategy with a delayed one. We included patients allocated to the early strategy in order to emulate a trial where patients would have been randomized to receive either IHD or CRRT within twelve hours after the documentation of severe AKI. We determined each patient’s modality group as the first RRT modality they received. The primary outcome was 60-day overall survival. We used two propensity score methods to balance the differences in baseline characteristics between groups and the primary analysis relied on inverse probability of treatment weighting.
Results
A total of 543 patients were included. Continuous RRT was the first modality in 269 patients and IHD in 274. Patients receiving CRRT had higher cardiovascular and total-SOFA scores. Inverse probability weighting allowed to adequately balance groups on all predefined confounders. The weighted Kaplan–Meier death rate at day 60 was 54·4% in the CRRT group and 46·5% in the IHD group (weighted HR 1·26, 95% CI 1·01–1·60). In a complementary analysis of less severely ill patients (SOFA score: 3–10), receiving IHD was associated with better day 60 survival compared to CRRT (weighted HR 1.82, 95% CI 1·01–3·28;
p
< 0.01). We found no evidence of a survival difference between the two RRT modalities in more severe patients.
Conclusion
Compared to IHD, CRRT as first modality seemed to convey no benefit in terms of survival or of kidney recovery and might even have been associated with less favorable outcome in patients with lesser severity of disease. A prospective randomized non-inferiority trial should be implemented to solve the persistent conundrum of the optimal RRT technique.
Journal Article
Prevalence and prognostic value of acute cor pulmonale and patent foramen ovale in ventilated patients with early acute respiratory distress syndrome: a multicenter study
by
Frat, Jean-Pierre
,
Vignon, Philippe
,
Courte, Anne
in
Acute respiratory distress syndrome
,
Anesthesiology
,
Comorbidity
2013
Purpose
We sought to determine the prevalence of and factors associated with acute cor pulmonale (ACP) and patent foramen ovale (PFO) at the early phase of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), and to assess their relation with mortality.
Methods
In this prospective multicenter study, 200 patients submitted to protective ventilation for early moderate to severe ARDS [PaO
2
/F
I
O
2
: 115 ± 39 with F
I
O
2
: 1; positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP): 10.6 ± 3.1 cmH
2
O] underwent transthoracic (TTE) and transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) <48 h after admission. Echocardiograms were independently interpreted by two experts. Factors associated with ACP, PFO, and 28-day mortality were identified using multivariate regression analysis.
Results
TEE depicted ACP in 45/200 patients [22.5%; 95 % confidence interval (CI) 16.9–28.9 %], PFO in 31 patients (15.5 %; 95 % CI 10.8–21.3 %), and both ACP and PFO in 9 patients (4.5 %; 95 % CI 2.1–8.4 %). PFO shunting was small and intermittent in 27 patients, moderate and consistent in 4 patients, and large or extensive in no instances. PaCO
2
>60 mmHg was strongly associated with ACP [odds ratio (OR) 3.70; 95 % CI 1.32–10.38;
p
= 0.01]. No factor was independently associated with PFO, with only a trend for age (OR 2.07; 95 % CI 0.91–4.72;
p
= 0.08). Twenty-eight-day mortality was 23 %. Plateau pressure (OR 1.15; 95 % CI 1.05–1.26;
p
< 0.01) and air leaks (OR 5.48; 95 % CI 1.30–22.99;
p
= 0.02), but neither ACP nor PFO, were independently associated with outcome.
Conclusions
TEE screening allowed identification of ACP in one-fourth of patients submitted to protective ventilation for early moderate to severe ARDS. PFO shunting was less frequent and never large or extensive. ACP and PFO were not related to outcome.
Journal Article
Chikungunya virus replicates in the human testis ex vivo and impacts peritubular myoid cells functional markers
by
Dejucq-Rainsford, Nathalie
,
Martin-Lefevre, Laurent
,
Mahé, Dominique
in
Biomarkers - metabolism
,
Chikungunya Fever - virology
,
Chikungunya virus
2025
Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is an emerging, mosquito-borne alphavirus responsible for debilitating, long-lasting arthralgia and myalgia. In light of recent findings of prolonged CHIKV RNA shedding in human semen and testicular tropism in animals infected with related alphaviruses, it is imperative to investigate CHIKV's capacity to infect the human testis, an established reservoir for arboviruses like Zika, and to delineate its implications for testicular function. Using an
human testicular tissue model, we demonstrate that CHIKV rapidly infects peritubular myoid cells (PMCs) and a range of interstitial cells, with robust viral production peaking at day 3 before declining. Importantly, seminiferous tubule cells and isolated testicular germ cells proved nonpermissive to CHIKV infection, indicating a potential limitation for seminal shedding of virions. Infected testicular explants exhibited a broad antiviral response but limited pro-inflammatory cytokines upregulation. CHIKV replication in the testis induced apoptosis and cell death, with a marked impact on PMC markers including decreased transcriptional expression of genes crucial for PMC contractile properties and extracellular matrix production. In summary, our study highlights the susceptibility of human testicular tissue to CHIKV infection, marked by robust viral replication that primarily compromises PMC function. The observed cellular impairment and damage suggest that CHIKV infection might negatively affect key testicular functions, such as tubular contractility and sperm release. These findings warrant further investigation into semen parameters and viral shedding in CHIKV-infected men.
Journal Article
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)-associated acute cor pulmonale and patent foramen ovale: a multicenter noninvasive hemodynamic study
by
Frat, Jean-Pierre
,
Vignon, Philippe
,
Courte, Anne
in
Acute respiratory distress syndrome
,
Adult
,
Aged
2015
Introduction
Acute cor pulmonale (ACP) and patent foramen ovale (PFO) remain common in patients under protective ventilation for acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). We sought to describe the hemodynamic profile associated with either ACP or PFO, or both, during the early course of moderate-to-severe ARDS using echocardiography.
Methods
In this 32-month prospective multicenter study, 195 patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS were assessed using echocardiography during the first 48 h of admission (age: 56 (SD: 15) years; Simplified Acute Physiology Score: 46 (17); PaO
2
/FiO
2
: 115 (39); V
T
: 6.5 (1.7) mL/kg; PEEP: 11 (3) cmH
2
O; driving pressure: 15 (5) cmH
2
O). ACP was defined by the association of right ventricular (RV) dilatation and systolic paradoxical ventricular septal motion. PFO was detected during a contrast study using agitated saline in the transesophageal bicaval view.
Results
ACP was present in 36 patients, PFO in 21 patients, both PFO and ACP in 8 patients and the 130 remaining patients had neither PFO nor ACP. Patients with ACP exhibited a restricted left ventricle (LV) secondary to RV dilatation and had concomitant RV dysfunction, irrespective of associated PFO, but preserved LV systolic function. Despite elevated systolic pulmonary artery pressure (sPAP), patients with isolated PFO had a normal RV systolic function. sPAP and PaCO
2
levels were significantly correlated.
Conclusions
In patients under protective mechanical ventilation with moderate-to-severe ARDS, ACP was associated with LV restriction and RV failure, whether PFO was present or not. Despite elevated sPAP, PFO shunting was associated with preserved RV systolic function.
Journal Article
Long-term outcomes after severe acute kidney injury in critically ill patients: the SALTO study
by
Martin-Lefevre, Laurent
,
Lautrette, Alexandre
,
Pons, Bertrand
in
Clinical outcomes
,
Injuries
,
Intensive care
2023
BackgroundThe extent of the consequences of an episode of severe acute kidney injury (AKI) on long-term outcome of critically ill patients remain debated. We conducted a prospective follow-up of patients included in a large multicenter clinical trial of renal replacement therapy (RRT) initiation strategy during severe AKI (the Artificial Kidney Initiation in Kidney Injury, AKIKI) to investigate long-term survival, renal outcome and health related quality of life (HRQOL). We also assessed the influence of RRT initiation strategy on these outcomes.ResultsFollow-up of patients extended from 60 days to a median of 3.35 years [interquartile range (IQR), 1.89 to 4.09] after the end of initial study. Of the 619 patients included in the AKIKI trial, 316 survived after 60 days. The overall survival rate at 3 years from inclusion was 39.4% (95% CI 35.4 to 43.4). A total of 46 patients (on the 175 with available data on long-term kidney function) experienced worsening of renal function (WRF) at the time of follow-up [overall incidence of 26%, cumulative incidence at 4 years: 20.6% (CI 95% 13.0 to 28.3)]. Fifteen patients required chronic dialysis (5% of patients who survived after day 90). Among the 226 long-term survivors, 80 (35%) answered the EQ-5D questionnaire. The median index value reported was 0.67 (IQR 0.40 to 1.00) indicating a noticeable alteration of quality of life. Initiation strategy for RRT had no effect on any long-term outcome.ConclusionSevere AKI in critically ill patients was associated with a high proportion of death within the first 2 months but less so during long-term follow-up. A quarter of long-term survivors experienced a WRF and suffered from a noticeable impairment of quality of life. Renal replacement therapy initiation strategy was not associated with mortality outcome.
Journal Article
Nephrotoxic drug burden among 1001 critically ill patients: impact on acute kidney injury
by
Martin-Lefevre, Laurent
,
Jean-Etienne Herbrecht
,
Giraudeau, Bruno
in
Antibiotics
,
Drug therapy
,
GLP-1 receptor agonists
2019
BackgroundNephrotoxic drug prescription may contribute to acute kidney injury (AKI) occurrence and worsening among critically ill patients and thus to associated morbidity and mortality. The objectives of this study were to describe nephrotoxic drug prescription in a large intensive-care unit cohort and, through a case–control study nested in the prospective cohort, to evaluate the link of nephrotoxic prescription burden with AKI.ResultsSix hundred and seventeen patients (62%) received at least one nephrotoxic drug, among which 303 (30%) received two or more. AKI was observed in 609 patients (61%). A total of 351 patients were considered as cases developing or worsening AKI a given index day during the first week in the intensive-care unit. Three hundred and twenty-seven pairs of cases and controls (patients not developing or worsening AKI during the first week in the intensive-care unit, alive the case index day) matched on age, chronic kidney disease, and simplified acute physiology score 2 were analyzed. The nephrotoxic burden prior to the index day was measured in drug.days: each drug and each day of therapy increasing the burden by 1 drug.day. This represents a semi-quantitative evaluation of drug exposure, potentially easy to implement by clinicians. Nephrotoxic burden was significantly higher among cases than controls: odds ratio 1.20 and 95% confidence interval 1.04–1.38. Sensitivity analysis showed that this association between nephrotoxic drug prescription in the intensive-care unit and AKI was predominant among the patients with lower severity of disease (simplified acute physiology score 2 below 48).ConclusionsThe frequently observed prescription of nephrotoxic drugs to critically ill patients may be evaluated semi-quantitatively through computing drug.day nephrotoxic burden, an index significantly associated with subsequent AKI occurrence, and worsening among patients with lower severity of disease.
Journal Article
Determinants of hospital and one-year mortality among older patients admitted to intensive care units: results from the multicentric SENIOREA cohort
by
Annweiler Cédric
,
Villers, Daniel
,
Lebas Eddy
in
Activities of daily living
,
Geriatrics
,
Intensive care
2021
BackgroundImproving outcomes of older patients admitted into intensive care units (ICU) is a raising concern. This study aimed at determining which geriatric and ICU parameters were associated with in-hospital and long-term mortality in this population.MethodsWe conducted a prospective multicentric observational cohort study, including patients aged 75 years and older requiring mechanical ventilation, admitted between September 2012 and December 2013 into ICU of 13 French hospitals. Comprehensive geriatric assessment at ICU admission and ICU usual parameters were registered in a standardized manner. Survival was recorded and comprehensive geriatric assessment was updated after 1 year during a dedicated home visit.Results501 patients were analyzed. 108 patients (21.6%) died during the hospital stay. One-year survival rate was 53.8% (IC 95% [49.2%; 58.2%]). Factors associated with increased in-hospital mortality were higher acute illness severity score, resuscitated cardiac arrest as primary ICU diagnosis, perception of anxiety and low quality of life by the proxy, and living in a chronic care facility before ICU admission. Among patients alive at hospital discharge, factors associated with increased 1-year mortality in multivariate analysis were longer duration of mechanical ventilation, all primary ICU diagnoses other than septic shock, a Katz-activities of daily living (ADL) score below 5 and living in a chronic care facility before ICU admission. Among the 163 survivors at 1 year who received a second comprehensive geriatric assessment, the ADL score (functional abilities) showed a significant but moderate decline over time, whereas the Mini-Zarit score (family burden) improved. No significant change in patients’ place of life was observed after 1 year, and quality of life was reported as happy-to-very-happy in 88% of survivors.ConclusionsThe mortality rate remains high among older ICU patients requiring mechanical ventilation. Factors associated with short- and long-term mortality combined geriatric and ICU criteria, which should be jointly evaluated in routine care.Clinical trial registration NCT01679171
Journal Article