Sodium Bicarbonate for the Treatment of Severe Metabolic Acidosis With Moderate or Severe Acute Kidney Injury in ICU

Category Systematic review
Registry of TrialsClinicalTrials.gov
Year 2019
Acute acidemia is frequently observed during critical illness, its reported incidence varying from 14%to 42%. Persistent acidemia has been associated with poor prognosis, with a mortality rate as high as 57% when the pH stays below 7⋅20 more than 24h. Along with case‐specific treatment, improvement of tissue perfusion and supportive measures such as mechanical ventilation and renal‐replacement therapy are the cornerstones of severe metabolic acidemia management in critically ill patients. Given that an acidotic cellular environment can cause cellular dysfunction, intravenous bicarbonate administration to increase the pH may also be beneficial. In a survey performed in North America, more than two thirds of the program directors in nephrology or intensive care units (ICU) declared that they used bicarbonate for the treatment of acidemia with hyperlactatemia.Despite the frequency of its use in ICUs across the world, the effect of bicarbonate infusion for the treatment of metabolic acidemia remains controversial. Small physiological studies,along with retrospective and/or observational studies, have failed to draw clear conclusions. Reluctance to use bicarbonate may be related to the absence of cardiovascular effects in two physiological studies and to the potential side effects, principally intracellular acidification due to the accumulation of carbon dioxide and the risk of hypocalcemia. However, bicarbonate could compensate the deleterious effects of acidotic cells on cardiovascular and oxygen delivery and might delay or avoid unnecessary early renal‐replacement therapy. Among the organ failure that are associated with acidemia, acute kidney injury (AKI) is often observed. Moderate to severe AKI (KDIGO 2‐3) occurs in 35‐40% of the critically ill patients . The mainstay of AKI management is to identify and correct causative factors while providing supportive care and treating acute complications. Clinical manifestations include encephalopathy and pericardial effusion. Other potentially dangerous complications include metabolic abnormalities of hyperkalaemia and acidosis, and fluid overload. Despite correcting causative and providing supportive care AKI‐associated mortality remains high. In intensive care settings, in‐hospital mortality rates of moderate to severe AKI with severe acidemia has been reported to be over 50% . Medical treatment of acidemia with AKI may involve administration of intravenous sodium bicarbonate. Interestingly, a recent literature review performed by the Cochrane group showed that no prospective randomized study has ever evaluated the impact intravenous sodium bicarbonate as a medical treatment to correct severe acidemia during AKI . Investigators conducted a prospective multicenter, randomized controlled trial to evaluate whether bicarbonate infusion would improve outcome in critically ill patients with severe metabolic acidemia (defined as an arterial pH equal or less than 7.20; PaCO2 equal or less than 45mmHg and bicarbonate concentration equal or less than of 20 mmol/l). Specifically, investigators hypothesized that, compared with no bicarbonate, early bicarbonate infusion would result in an improvement in the primary outcome (ie, composite criteria of organ failure at day 7 and any cause of death at day 28). The findings of the BICARICU‐1 trial suggest that in the overall non‐selected patients, sodium bicarbonate infusion is not associated with clinical outcome (no difference in the primary outcome and the Kaplan‐Meier method estimate of the probability of survival at day 28 between the control group and bicarbonate group: (46% [95% CI 40‐54] vs 55% [49‐63]; p=0⋅09)). In the overall non‐selected patients, the absolute risk reduction of the composite outcome was 5.5%, with the possibility of being as large as 19.4% (the lower limit of the confidence interval), and concerning the hard endpoint mortality at 28 days, the absolute risk reduction was 9% (NNT=12), with the possibility of being as large as 19.4% (NNT=5) (p=0.07). Moreover, in multivariate analysis, after adjusting for important clinical covariates, the effect of sodium bicarbonate on mortality at 28 days became statistically significant (HR=0.727, 95% CI 0.54‐0.98, p=0.035). In the a‐priori defined clinical stratum of patients with moderate to severe acute kidney injury (Acute Kidney Injury Network scores of 2 or 3 at enrolment), sodium bicarbonate infusion was associated with an improvement in the primary outcome (ie, composite criteria of organ failure at day 7 and any cause of death at day 28) and a reduced rate of mortality from enrolment to day 28 between the control group and bicarbonate group : 63% [95% CI 52‐72] vs 46% [35‐55]; p=0⋅0283. Additionally, the number of days alive and free from renal‐replacement therapy was higher in the bicarbonate group than in the control group both in the overall study population and in the a‐priori defined stratum of patients with moderate to severe acute kidney injury. Knowledge gap and research hypothesis Although investigators previously reported that sodium bicarbonate infusion might be associated with less renal replacement therapy in critically ill patients with severe acidemia and that sodium bicarbonate infusion might be associated with a better day 28 survival in patients showing both severe acidemia and moderate to severe AKI, there is currently no study that has ever evaluated the room for sodium bicarbonate infusion in critically ill patients with both severe acidemia and moderate to severe AKI. The hypothesis is that sodium bicarbonate infusion will be associated with a better long term (Day 90) survival compared to no sodium bicarbonate infusion. Unpublished post hoc analysis of the BICARICU‐1 trial suggests indeed a 10% drop of day 90 mortality in patients treated with sodium bicarbonate infusion during their ICU stay. In a previous trial (BICARICU‐1 trial,), Investigators have shown that sodium bicarbonate infusion is efficient and safe to increase the arterial pH. Titrating the infusion to target a pH equal or above 7.30 is feasible and the two groups (sodium bicarbonate infusion vs no sodium bicarbonate infusion) were different among time for the pH value and the plasma bicarbonate concentration making possible to impute the difference in outcome to the treatment arm. Physicians in charge will (in the intervention group) use a 4.2% sodium bicarbonate solution and will administer from 125ml to 250ml in 30min to 240min. Although a strict calculation of bicarbonate deficit would be of interest, they believe that it would not reflect the daily routine practice in most of the centers. Moreover, bicarbonate deficit is calculated with a controverted formula and our trial is designed as a pragmatic trial. Originality and innovative aspects of the study This will be the first randomised clinical trial investigating whether sodium bicarbonate infusion is associated with day 90 mortality in critically ill patients with both severe acidemia and moderate to severe AKI. If sodium bicarbonate, a medication worldwide available for almost no additional cost is associated with a better outcome, it would change the way of treating these patients around the globe.
Epistemonikos ID: cd32b31b8fc34f13cc2a4bb688cce71c915a17cf
First added on: Dec 20, 2022