by Al Duhailib, Zainab; Hegazy, Ahmed F.; Lalli, Raj;
Fiorini, Kyle; Priestap, Fran; Iansavichene, Alla; Slessarev, Marat
Critical Care
Medicine: December 2020
- Volume 48 - Issue 12 - p 1855-1861
Objectives:
In this systematic review and meta-analysis, we assessed
whether a high Co2 gap predicts mortality in adult critically ill patients
with circulatory shock.
Data Sources:
A systematic search of MEDLINE and EMBASE electronic
databases from inception to October 2019.
Study
Selection:
Studies from adult (age ≥ 18 yr) ICU patients with shock reporting
Co2 gap and outcomes of interest. Case reports and conference abstracts
were excluded.
Data
Extraction:
Data extraction and study quality assessment were performed
independently in duplicate.
Data Synthesis:
We used the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale to assess methodological
study quality. Effect sizes were pooled using a random-effects model. The
primary outcome was mortality (28 d and hospital). Secondary outcomes were ICU
length of stay, hospital length of stay, duration of mechanical ventilation,
use of renal replacement therapy, use of vasopressors and inotropes, and
association with cardiac index, lactate, and central venous oxygen saturation.
Conclusions:
We included 21 studies (n = 2,155 patients) from
medical (n = 925), cardiovascular (n = 685), surgical (n = 483),
and mixed (n = 62) ICUs. A high Co2 gap was associated with increased
mortality (odds ratio, 2.22; 95% CI, 1.30–3.82; p = 0.004) in
patients with shock, but only those from medical and surgical ICUs. A high Co2 gap
was associated with higher lactate levels (mean difference 0.44 mmol/L; 95% CI,
0.20–0.68 mmol/L; p = 0.0004), lower cardiac index (mean difference,
–0.76 L/min/m2; 95% CI, –1.04 to –0.49 L/min/m2; p = 0.00001), and
central venous oxygen saturation (mean difference, –5.07; 95% CI, –7.78 to
–2.37; p = 0.0002). A high Co2 gap was not associated with
longer ICU or hospital length of stays, requirement for renal replacement
therapy, longer duration of mechanical ventilation, or higher vasopressors and
inotropes use. Future studies should evaluate whether resuscitation aimed at
closing the Co2 gap improves mortality in shock.
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