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Relationship between corticosteroid use and incidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia in COVID-19 patients: a retrospective multicenter study

Authors :
Saura, Ouriel
Rouzé, Anahita
Martin Loeches, Ignacio
Povoa, Pedro
Kreitmann, Louis
Torres Martí, Antoni
Metzelard, Matthieu
Du Cheyron, Damien
Lambiotte, Fabien
Tamion, Fabienne
Labruyere, Marie
Boulle Geronimi, Claire
Luyt, Charles-Edouard
Nyunga, Martine
Pouly, Olivier
Thille, Arnaud Wilfrid
Megarbane, Bruno
Saade, Anastasia
Magira, Eleni
Llitjos, Jean-François
Ioannidou, Iliana
Pierre, Alexandre
Reignier, Jean
Garot, Denis
Baudel, Jean-Luc
Voiriot, Guillaume
Plantefeve, Gaëtan
Morawiec, Elise
Asfar, Pierre
Boyer, Alexandre
Mekontso-Dessap, Armand
Bardaka, Fotini
Diaz, Emili
Vinsonneau, Christophe
Floch, Pierre-Edouard
Weiss, Nicolas
Ceccato, Adrian
Artigas, Antonio
Nora, David
Duhamel, Alain
Labreuche, Julien
Nseir, Saad
coVAPid Study Group
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
BioMed Central, 2023.

Abstract

Background Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is common in patients with severe SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia. The aim of this ancillary analysis of the coVAPid multicenter observational retrospective study is to assess the relationship between adjuvant corticosteroid use and the incidence of VAP. Methods Planned ancillary analysis of a multicenter retrospective European cohort in 36 ICUs. Adult patients receiving invasive mechanical ventilation for more than 48 h for SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia were consecutively included between February and May 2020. VAP diagnosis required strict definition with clinical, radiological and quantitative microbiological confirmation. We assessed the association of VAP with corticosteroid treatment using univariate and multivariate cause-specific Cox’s proportional hazard models with adjustment on pre-specified confounders. Results Among the 545 included patients, 191 (35%) received corticosteroids. The proportional hazard assumption for the effect of corticosteroids on the incidence of VAP could not be accepted, indicating that this effect varied during ICU stay. We found a non-significant lower risk of VAP for corticosteroid-treated patients during the first days in the ICU and an increased risk for longer ICU stay. By modeling the effect of corticosteroids with time-dependent coefficients, the association between corticosteroids and the incidence of VAP was not significant (overall effect p = 0.082), with time-dependent hazard ratios (95% confidence interval) of 0.47 (0.17–1.31) at day 2, 0.95 (0.63–1.42) at day 7, 1.48 (1.01–2.16) at day 14 and 1.94 (1.09–3.46) at day 21. Conclusions No significant association was found between adjuvant corticosteroid treatment and the incidence of VAP, although a time-varying effect of corticosteroids was identified along the 28-day follow-up.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....89e1f1e61ca7ef1d81bef953f6d0a75c