The Impact of Steroid Responder Status on Long-Term Outcomes in Critically Ill Patients With Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Receiving High-Dose Glucocorticoids
Thomas Leahy, Aneesha Chauhan, Victoria Nicholas, Pooja Patel, Alfred Wright, Samuel Miller, Geoff Ball, Christopher Remmington, Suveer Singh

TL;DR
This study shows that early improvement in lung injury scores after high-dose steroids in ARDS patients predicts better survival outcomes.
Contribution
The study introduces mLIS change as a novel predictor of long-term survival in ARDS patients receiving high-dose glucocorticoids.
Findings
Patients showing a partial or full response to steroids had significantly lower mortality rates than non-responders.
Change in mLIS by day 10 was strongly associated with survival (p<0.001) and had good predictive accuracy (c-statistic 0.86).
Abstract
Background and objective High-dose intravenous pulsed glucocorticosteroids (GCS) are not part of the standard treatment in acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), and the evidence supporting their use is conflicting. In clinical practice, however, they are used in specialist settings when clinico-patho-radiological features suggest a potentially steroid-responsive pattern, or as a last resort in cases where patients are unable to be weaned off mechanical ventilation. This study aimed to investigate if an early objective response to high-dose GCS treatment in selected critically ill patients is predictive of survival in ARDS. Methods This study involved a case series of 63 patients treated at a tertiary specialist respiratory ICU between 2009 and 2017 who received high-dose GCS for ARDS following a multidisciplinary board agreement. Patients were stratified according to the change…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory Support and Mechanisms · Sepsis Diagnosis and Treatment · Intensive Care Unit Cognitive Disorders
