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Clinical Trial
. 2014 Jan;7(1):40-8.
doi: 10.1016/j.jcmg.2013.08.012. Epub 2013 Nov 27.

Acute mortality in critically ill patients undergoing echocardiography with or without an ultrasound contrast agent

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Acute mortality in critically ill patients undergoing echocardiography with or without an ultrasound contrast agent

Michael L Main et al. JACC Cardiovasc Imaging. 2014 Jan.

Abstract

Objectives: The objective of this observational study was to compare 48-h all-cause mortality (as well as hospital stay mortality) among critically ill patients who underwent echocardiography either with or without an ultrasound contrast agent (UCA).

Background: The safety of perflutren-based UCAs has been questioned by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (particularly when administered to critically ill patients) following rare reports of deaths or life-threatening adverse reactions that occurred in close temporal relationship to UCA administration.

Methods: This was a retrospective observational outcome study conducted in critically ill patients to compare all-cause 48-h and hospital stay mortality subsequent to echocardiography procedures performed either with or without a UCA. The study utilized discharge data from a database maintained by Premier, Inc. (Charlotte, North Carolina). Premier's database is the largest U.S. hospital-based, service-level comparative database for quality and outcomes research, and provides detailed resource utilization data along with patients' primary and secondary diagnoses and procedure billing codes. A propensity score-matching algorithm between UCA-enhanced echocardiography patients and non-contrast-enhanced echocardiography patients was utilized to reduce the potential for imbalance in covariates of selected patients in the comparison of mortality between groups.

Results: Patients undergoing echocardiography with a UCA had lower mortality at 48 h compared with patients undergoing non-contrast-enhanced echocardiography (1.70% vs. 2.50%), with an odds ratio = 0.66 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.54 to 0.80). Patients undergoing echocardiography with a UCA had lower hospital stay mortality compared with patients undergoing noncontrast echocardiography (14.85% vs. 15.66%), with an odds ratio = 0.89 (95% CI: 0.84 to 0.96).

Conclusions: In critically ill, propensity-matched hospitalized patients undergoing echocardiography, use of a UCA is associated with a 28% lower mortality at 48 h in comparison with patients undergoing non-contrast-enhanced echocardiography. These results are reassuring, given previous reports suggesting an association between UCAs and increased mortality in critically ill patients.

Keywords: APR-DRG; All Patient Refined Diagnosis Related Group; CI; FDA; Food and Drug Administration; ICU; TTE; UCA; cTTE; confidence interval; contrast echocardiography; contrast enhanced ultrasound; contrast-enhanced transthoracic echocardiography; intensive care unit; nTTE; non–contrast-enhanced transthoracic echocardiography; transthoracic echocardiography; ultrasound contrast agent; ultrasound contrast agents.

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