by Joachim Düring, Martin Annborn, Alain Cariou, Michelle S.
Chew, Josef Dankiewicz, Hans Friberg, Matthias Haenggi, Zana Haxhija, Janus C.
Jakobsen, Halvor Langeland, Fabio Silvio Taccone, Matthew Thomas, Susann Ullén,
Matt P. Wise and Niklas Nielsen
Critical Care volume 26,
Article number: 231 (2022) Published: 31
July 2022
Background
Targeted temperature management at 33 °C (TTM33) has
been employed in effort to mitigate brain injury in unconscious survivors of
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Current guidelines recommend prevention
of fever, not excluding TTM33. The main objective of this study was to
investigate if TTM33 is associated with mortality in patients with vasopressor
support on admission after OHCA.
Methods
We performed a post hoc analysis of patients included in the
TTM-2 trial, an international, multicenter trial, investigating outcomes in
unconscious adult OHCA patients randomized to TTM33 versus normothermia.
Patients were grouped according to level of circulatory support on admission:
(1) no-vasopressor support, mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) ≥ 70 mmHg;
(2) moderate-vasopressor support MAP < 70 mmHg or any dose of
dopamine/dobutamine or noradrenaline/adrenaline dose ≤ 0.25 µg/kg/min; and
(3) high-vasopressor support, noradrenaline/adrenaline dose > 0.25 µg/kg/min.
Hazard ratios with TTM33 were calculated for all-cause 180-day mortality in
these groups.
Results
The TTM-2 trial enrolled 1900 patients. Data on primary
outcome were available for 1850 patients, with 662, 896, and 292 patients in
the, no-, moderate-, or high-vasopressor support groups, respectively. Hazard
ratio for 180-day mortality was 1.04 [98.3% CI 0.78–1.39] in the no-, 1.22 [98.3%
CI 0.97–1.53] in the moderate-, and 0.97 [98.3% CI 0.68–1.38] in the
high-vasopressor support groups with regard to TTM33. Results were consistent
in an imputed, adjusted sensitivity analysis.
Conclusions
In this exploratory analysis, temperature control at
33 °C after OHCA, compared to normothermia, was not associated with higher
incidence of death in patients stratified according to vasopressor support on
admission.
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