Critical
Care Medicine: October 2015 - Volume 43 - Issue 10 - p 2141–2146
Fawzy,
A et al
Objectives:
Clinical guidelines recommend norepinephrine as initial vasopressor of choice
for septic shock, with dopamine suggested as an alternative vasopressor in
selected patients with low risk of tachyarrhythmias and absolute or relative
bradycardia. We sought to determine practice patterns and outcomes associated
with vasopressor selection in a large, population-based cohort of patients with
septic shock that allows for assessment of outcomes in clinically important
subgroups. Design: We performed a retrospective cohort study to determine
factors associated with choice of dopamine as compared with norepinephrine as
initial vasopressor for patients with septic shock. We used propensity score
matching to compare risk of hospital mortality based on initial vasopressor. We
performed multiple sensitivity analyses using alternative methods to address
confounding and hospital-level clustering. We investigated interaction between
vasopressor selection and mortality in clinical subgroups based on arrhythmia
and cardiovascular risk. Setting: Enhanced administrative data (Premier,
Charlotte, NC) from 502 U.S. hospitals during the years 2010–2013. Subjects: A
total of 61,122 patients admitted with septic shock who received dopamine or
norepinephrine as initial vasopressor during the first 2 days of
hospitalization. Interventions: None. Measurements and Main Results:
Norepinephrine (77.6%) was the most frequently used initial vasopressor during
septic shock. Dopamine was preferentially selected by cardiologists, in the
Southern United States, at nonteaching hospitals, for older patients with more
cardiovascular comorbidities and was used less frequently over time. Patients
receiving dopamine experienced greater hospital mortality (propensity-matched cohort:
n = 38,788; 25% vs 23.7%; odds ratio, 1.08; 95% CI, 1.02–1.14). Sensitivity
analyses showed similar results. Subgroup analyses showed no evidence for
effect modification based on arrhythmia risk or underlying cardiovascular
disease. Conclusions: In a large population-based sample of patients with
septic shock in the United States, use of dopamine as initial vasopressor was
associated with increased mortality among multiple clinical subgroups. Areas
where use of dopamine as initial vasopressor is more common represent potential
targets for quality improvement intervention.
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