The Dose Response Multicentre Investigation on Fluid Assessment (DoReMIFA) in critically ill patients
Garzotto et al. Critical Care (2016) 20:196
DOI 10.1186/s13054-016-1355-9
RESEARCH
Open Access
The Dose Response Multicentre
Investigation on Fluid Assessment
(DoReMIFA) in critically ill patients
F. Garzotto1,2*, M. Ostermann3, D. Martín-Langerwerf4, M. Sánchez-Sánchez5, J. Teng6, R. Robert7, A. Marinho8,
M. E. Herrera-Gutierrez9, H. J. Mao10, D. Benavente11, E. Kipnis12, A. Lorenzin2, D. Marcelli13, C. Tetta13,
C. Ronco1,2 and for the DoReMIFA study group
Abstract
Background: The previously published “Dose Response Multicentre International Collaborative Initiative (DoReMi)”
study concluded that the high mortality of critically ill patients with acute kidney injury (AKI) was unlikely to be related
to an inadequate dose of renal replacement therapy (RRT) and other factors were contributing. This follow-up study
aimed to investigate the impact of daily fluid balance and fluid accumulation on mortality of critically ill patients
without AKI (N-AKI), with AKI (AKI) and with AKI on RRT (AKI-RRT) receiving an adequate dose of RRT.
Methods: We prospectively enrolled all consecutive patients admitted to 21 intensive care units (ICUs) from nine
countries and collected baseline characteristics, comorbidities, severity of illness, presence of sepsis, daily physiologic
parameters and fluid intake-output, AKI stage, need for RRT and survival status. Daily fluid balance was computed and
fluid overload (FO) was defined as percentage of admission body weight (BW). Maximum fluid overload (MFO) was the
peak value of FO.
Results: We analysed 1734 patients. A total of 991 (57 %) had N-AKI, 560 (32 %) had AKI but did not have RRT and 183
(11 %) had AKI-RRT. ICU mortality was 22.3 % in AKI patients and 5.6 % in those without AKI (p < 0.0001). Progressive
fluid accumulation was seen in all three groups. Maximum fluid accumulation occurred on day 2 in N-AKI patients
(2.8 % of BW), on day 3 in AKI patients not receiving RRT (4.3 % of BW) and on day 5 in AKI-RRT patients (7.9 % of BW).
The main findings were: (1) the odds ratio (OR) for hospital mortality increased by 1.075 (95 % confidence interval 1.
055–1.095) with every 1 % increase of MFO. When adjusting for severity of illness and AKI status, the OR changed to 1.
044. This phenomenon was a continuum and independent of thresholds as previously reported. (2) Multivariate
analysis confirmed that the speed of fluid accumulation was independently associated with ICU mortality. (3) Fluid
accumulation increased significantly in the 3-day period prior to the diagnosis of AKI and peaked 3 days later.
Conclusions: In critically ill patients, the severity and speed of fluid accumulation are independent risk factors for ICU
mortality. Fluid balance abnormality precedes and follows the diagnosis of AKI.
Keywords: Fluid overload, RRT, AKI, Critical illness, ICU
* Correspondence:
1
Department of Nephrology Dialysis and Transplantation, San Bortolo
Hospital, 37 Via Rodolfi, 36100 Vicenza, Italy
2
International Renal Research Institute of Vicenza (IRRIV), San Bortolo Hospital,
37 Via Rodolfi, 36100 Vicenza, Italy
Full list of author information is available at the end of the article
© 2016 The Author(s). Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and
reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to
the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver
(http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
Garzotto et al. Critical Care (2016) 20:196
Background
Renal replacement therapy (RRT) constitutes a key component of modern critical care, together with mechanical
ventilation, fluid resuscitation and vasopressor support.
The main reasons for initiation are acute kidney injury
(AKI) and fluid overload (FO). There is growing evidence
that FO is harmful and associated with a longer hospital
stay and increased morbidity and mortality [1–3]. FO may
be present at admission or develop during ICU stay due to
a combination of oliguria and liberal fluid administration
leading to a positive fluid balance [4, 5].
FO accounts for an increased risk of death in patients
with AKI [6, 7]. Furthermore, fluid accumulation itself
may be independently associated with an increased risk
of developing AKI and mortality. In a secondary analysis
of the SOAP study, Payen et al. showed that the average
daily fluid balance in the first 7 days was significantly
more positive in patients with AKI [1]. Bouchard et al.
demonstrated that crude mortality was higher in AKI patients when fluid overload was present [8]. Subsequent
studies confirmed that both, severity of FO and the number
of days spent with FO, were risk factors for poor outcome.
We previously published a prospective cohort observational study, the “Dose Response Multicentre International Collaborative Initiative (DoReMi)” [9], which
evaluated the practice of continuous renal replacement
therapy (CRRT) in patients in the intensive care unit
(ICU). The study confirmed that in spite of a discrepancy
(−25 %) between effective (27 ml/kg/h) and prescribed
(34 ml/kg/h) dose, the median delivered dose was
considered adequate based on two recent large trials
(RCTs) [10, 11]. The DoReMi study therefore concluded
that the high mortality observed in AKI patients was not
related to inadequate treatment dose but to other possible
factors instead.
The “Dose Response Multicentre Investigation on
Fluid Assessment (DoReMIFA)” study is an evolution of
the previous DoReMi study. It aimed to prospectively
evaluate the practice of fluid management in the ICU,
including patients with AKI (AKI) and without AKI
(N-AKI), and patients with AKI treated with RRT
(AKI-RRT) in different ICUs (in Europe, the Far East and
Latin America). The main objective of this study was to
investigate whether fluid balance throughout ICU stay and
during RRT affects mortality of ICU patients. Data collection and analysis was facilitated by the use of electronic
medical records and web-based case report forms (CRFs).
Methods
The study protocol was made available for review to
ICU physicians from different countries. Once the ICU
was enrolled in the research group, data were collected
for all admitted patients for 3 consecutive months, in
the period between April 2012 and September 2014
Page 2 of 14
using an electronic case report form. Exclusion criteria
were (a) age <18 years or >85 years; (b) chronic dialysis;
(c) short-term postoperative admission; (d) life expectancy less than 48 h; (e) need for extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) within the first 48 h of ICU
stay. All types of ICUs were eligible on voluntary basis
within the indicated period. Local ethics committees ap (...truncated)