Relation between initial hypothermia, course of the hypothermia and mortality in patients with septic shock: a post-hoc analysis of the SEPSISPAM randomized trial
Louis Bordeau, Valérie Seegers, Julien Demiselle, Frédérique Schortgen, Fabien Grelon, Bruno Mégarbane, Nadia Anguel, Jean-Paul Mira, Pierre-François Dequin, Soizic Gergaud, Nicolas Weiss, François Legay, Yves Le Tulzo, Marie Conrad, Remi Coudroy, Frédéric Gonzalez

TL;DR
This study found that hypothermia in septic shock patients, especially if it persists, is linked to higher 90-day mortality.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct hypothermia trajectories and their association with mortality in septic shock patients.
Findings
Hypothermia at inclusion was associated with a 92% higher mortality risk compared to normothermic patients.
Persistent hypothermia during the first 24 hours was linked to a 78% mortality rate at day 90.
Mortality increased with the severity of hypothermia trajectory, from 40% in normothermic to 78% in persistent hypothermia.
Abstract
In patients with septic shock as well as in the critically ill, the impact of hypothermia and core temperature changes during the first 24 h on mortality remains uncertain. In this post-hoc analysis of the SEPSISPAM trial, we investigated the association between hypothermia at inclusion, hypothermia trajectories and 90-day mortality in patients with septic shock. This post-hoc analysis of the SEPSISPAM trial included patients with septic shock enrolled within 6 h of vasopressors initiation. Core temperature was assessed every 2 h during the first 24 h. Hypothermia was defined by a temperature <36 °C. Mortality was assessed at day 90. We included 691 patients from the SEPSISPAM trial, of whom 103 (14.9%) presented with hypothermia at inclusion. After adjustment for confounding factors, as compared with patients without hypothermia at inclusion, patients with hypothermia at inclusion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermal Regulation in Medicine · Sepsis Diagnosis and Treatment · Cardiac Arrest and Resuscitation
