by
Sunitha Palanidurai, Jason Phua, Yiong Huak Chan and Amartya Mukhopadhyay
Annals of Intensive Care: Published: 09
August 2021
Background
The current Berlin definition of acute respiratory distress
syndrome (ARDS) uses the PaO2/FiO2 (P/F) ratio to classify severity.
However, for the same P/F ratio, a patient on a higher positive end-expiratory
pressure (PEEP) may have more severe lung injury than one on a lower PEEP.
Objectives
We designed a new formula, the P/FP ratio, incorporating
PEEP into the P/F ratio and multiplying with a correction factor of 10 [(PaO2*10)/(FiO2*PEEP)],
to evaluate if it better predicts hospital mortality compared to the P/F ratio
post-intubation and to assess the resultant changes in severity classification
of ARDS.
Methods
We categorized patients from a dataset of seven ARDS network
trials using the thresholds of ≤ 100 (severe), 101–200 (moderate), and 201–300
(mild) for both P/F (mmHg) and P/FP (mmHg/cmH2O) ratios and evaluated hospital
mortality using areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUC).
Results
Out of 3,442 patients, 1,057 (30.7%) died. The AUC for
mortality was higher for the P/FP ratio than the P/F ratio for PEEP levels > 5
cmH2O: 0.710 (95% CI 0.691–0.730) versus 0.659 (95% CI 0.637–0.681), P < 0.001.
Improved AUC was seen with increasing PEEP levels; for PEEP ≥ 18 cmH2O: 0.963
(95% CI 0.947–0.978) versus 0.828 (95% CI 0.765–0.891), P < 0.001. When
the P/FP ratio was used instead of the P/F ratio, 12.5% and 15% of patients
with moderate and mild ARDS, respectively, were moved to more severe
categories, while 13.9% and 33.6% of patients with severe and moderate ARDS,
respectively, were moved to milder categories. The median PEEP and FiO2 were
14 cmH2O and 0.70 for patients reclassified to severe ARDS, and 5 cmH2O and
0.40 for patients reclassified to mild ARDS.
Conclusions
The multifactorial P/FP ratio has a greater predictive
validity for hospital mortality in ARDS than the P/F ratio. Changes in severity
classification with the P/FP ratio reflect both true illness severity and the
applied PEEP strategy.
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