International variation in the management of severe COVID-19 patients

Publication date

2020-08-05

Authors

Azoulay, Elie
de Waele, Jan
Ferrer, Ricard
Staudinger, Thomas
Borkowska, Marta
Povoa, Pedro
Iliopoulou, Katerina
Artigas, Antonio
Schaller, Stefan J
Shankar-Hari, Manu

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

No license information available

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There is little evidence to support the management of severe COVID-19 patients. METHODS: To document this variation in practices, we performed an online survey (April 30-May 25, 2020) on behalf of the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine (ESICM). A case vignette was sent to ESICM members. Questions investigated practices for a previously healthy 39-year-old patient presenting with severe hypoxemia from COVID-19 infection. RESULTS: A total of 1132 ICU specialists (response rate 20%) from 85 countries (12 regions) responded to the survey. The survey provides information on the heterogeneity in patient's management, more particularly regarding the timing of ICU admission, the first line oxygenation strategy, optimization of management, and ventilatory settings in case of refractory hypoxemia. Practices related to antibacterial, antiviral, and anti-inflammatory therapies are also investigated. CONCLUSIONS: There are important practice variations in the management of severe COVID-19 patients, including differences at regional and individual levels. Large outcome studies based on multinational registries are warranted.

Keywords

Acute respiratory distress syndrome, Coronavirus, Remdesivir, Viral infection, Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

Citation

Azoulay, E, de Waele, J, Ferrer, R, Staudinger, T, Borkowska, M, Povoa, P, Iliopoulou, K, Artigas, A, Schaller, S J, Shankar-Hari, M, Pellegrini, M, Darmon, M, Kesecioglu, J & Cecconi, M 2020, 'International variation in the management of severe COVID-19 patients', Critical care (London, England), vol. 24, no. 1, 486. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-020-03194-w