Background: Our aim was to study if baseline serum cortisol is related to the hemodynamic response to steroid treatment in septic shock patients and if the measurement of total proteins and eosinophil count improves its accuracy.

Methods: A retrospective analysis was performed in 66 consecutive surgical septic shock patients receiving steroid treatment. Four criteria were chosen to define hemodynamic improvement based on the combination of noradrenaline (NA) withdrawal (at 24 and 48 hour) and an increase of the hemodynamic index (HI = mean arterial pressure/NA dose) of 150% at 24 hour and of 350% at 48 hour. The accuracy of the serum cortisol to predict the hemodynamic response to steroid treatment following the four criteria was determined by receiver operating characteristic curve analysis.

Results: The largest area under curve was found for the NA withdrawal or an increase of the hemodynamic index >350% at 48 hour after starting the steroid treatment (area under curve, 0.686; 95% CI, 0.553-0.819; p = 0.01). This criteria was met by 35 patients (53%) and was associated with a lower mortality (25.7% vs. 67.7%, p = 0.001). However, no clear serum cortisol cutoff value for the diagnosis of adrenal insufficiency based on the hemodynamic response could be found. Neither the baseline proteins nor the eosinophils improved the accuracy of cortisol to predict hemodynamic improvement.

Conclusion: The measurement of serum cortisol in surgical septic shock patients does not accurately predict the hemodynamic response to steroids. No clear cutoff value for cortisol, alone or in combination with total protein and/or eosinophil count, can be defined to indicate steroid treatment.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/TA.0b013e3181825b6dDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

steroid treatment
24
hemodynamic response
20
septic shock
16
serum cortisol
16
eosinophil count
12
response steroid
12
shock patients
12
predict hemodynamic
12
hemodynamic
9
total proteins
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!