Association between delta anion gap/delta bicarbonate and outcome of surgical patients admitted to intensive care unit

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Abstract

Background: Patients undergoing high-risk surgeries with acid-based disorders are associated with poor outcomes. The screening of mixed acid-based metabolic disorders by calculating delta anion gap (AG)/delta bicarbonate (Bic) has a clinically relevant role in patients with high AG metabolic acidosis (MA), however its utility in individuals facing high-risk surgical procedures remains unclear. Objective: Characterize metabolic acidosis using delta-AG/delta-Bic and its associations in patients undergoing high-risk surgeries with possible outcome-related complications. Design: Prospective observational multicentric study. Setting: Three tertiary hospitals in Brazil. Patients: Patients undergoing high-risk surgeries, aged 18 years or older, requiring postoperative critical care. Main outcome measures: Patients undergoing high-risk surgeries monitored during the postoperative phase across three distinct intensive care units (ICUs), with assessment encompassing laboratory analyses upon admission and 24 h thereafter. Patients with MA and with elevated AG within 24 h were separated into 3 subgroups: [G1 – delta-AG/delta-Bic < 1.0] MA associated with hyperchloremia; [G2 – delta-AG/delta-Bic between 1.0 and 1.6] MA and no mixed disorders; and [G3 – delta-AG/delta-Bic > 1.6] MA associated with alkalosis. Primary endpoint was 30-day mortality. The secondary endpoints were cardiovascular, respiratory, renal, neurological, coagulation and infective complications. Results: From the 621 surgical patients admitted to ICU, 421 (51.7%) had any type of acidosis. After 24 h, 140 patients remained with MA with elevated AG (G1: 101, G2: 18, and G3: 21). When compared to patients from subgroups 1 and 3, the subgroup with no mixed disorders 2 showed higher 30-day mortality (adjusted HR = 3.72; 95% CI 1.11–12.89, p = 0.001), cardiovascular complications (p = 0.001), ICU mortality (p = 0.03) and sum of all complications during the ICU period (p = 0.021). Conclusion: In the postoperative time, patients with metabolic acidosis and no mixed disorders present higher ICU-Mortality and higher cardiovascular postoperative complications when compared with patients with combined hyperchloremia or alkalosis. Delta-AG/delta-Bic can be a useful tool to evaluate major clinical outcomes in this population.

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Menezes, P. F. L., Esper Treml, R., Caldonazo, T., Kirov, H., da Silva, B. C., de Oliveira, A. M. R. R., … Silva, J. M. (2024). Association between delta anion gap/delta bicarbonate and outcome of surgical patients admitted to intensive care unit. BMC Anesthesiology, 24(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12871-024-02564-z

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