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Breast Surgery

Tuesday, 28 April 2015

Paracetamol therapy and outcome of critically ill patients

Paracetamol therapy and outcome of critically ill patients: a multicentre retrospective observational study. Critical Care 2015, 19: 162.


Suzuki, S., et al.


http://ccforum.com/content/pdf/s13054-015-0865-1.pdf


We conducted a multicenter retrospective observational study in four ICUs. We obtained information on paracetamol use, body temperature, demographic, clinical and outcome data from each hospital’s clinical information system and admissions and discharges database. We performed statistical analysis to assess the association between paracetamol administration and hospital mortality. Results: We studied 15,818 patients with 691,348 temperature measurements from 4 ICUs. Of these patients, 10,046 (64%) received at least one gram of paracetamol. Patients who received paracetamol had lower in-hospital mortality (10% vs. 20%, p <0.001) and survivors were more likely to have received paracetamol (66% vs. 46%; p < 0.001). However, paracetamol-treated patients were also more likely to be admitted to ICU after surgery (70% vs. 51%; p < 0.001) and/or after elective surgery (55% vs. 37%; p < 0.001). On multivariate logistic regression analysis including a propensity score for paracetamol treatment, we found a significant and independent association between the use of paracetamol and reduced in-hospital mortality (Adjusted odds ratio 0.60 [95%CI 0.53-0.68], p < 0.001). Cox-proportional hazards analysis showed that patients who received paracetamol also had a significantly longer time to death (Adjusted hazard ratio 0.51 [95%CI 0.46-0.56], P <0.001). The association between paracetamol and decreased mortality and/or time to death was broadly consistent across surgical and medical patients. It remained present after adjusting for paracetamol administration as a time dependent variable. However, when such time-dependent analysis was performed, the association of paracetamol with outcome lost statistical significance in the presence of fever, suspected infection and in patients in the lower tertiles of Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE II) scores. Conclusions: Paracetamol administration is common in ICU and appears independently associated with reduced in-hospital mortality and time to death after adjustment for multiple potential confounders and propensity score. This association, however, was modified by the presence of fever, suspected infection and lesser illness severity and may represent the effect of indication bias.

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