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Modern CRRT systems are associated with lower risk of hypothermia

Bell, Max ; Hertzberg, Daniel ; Hansson, Fredrik ; Carlsson, Åsa ; Berkius, Johan ; Vimlati, Laszlo ; Nilsson, Ann Kristin ; Ekström, Carolina and Broman, Marcus LU (2024) In Scientific Reports 14(1).
Abstract

One risk of continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) is inadvertent hypothermia (IH), which is defined as a non-therapeutic core temperature decrease below normal. In continuous renal replacement therapy, heat loss will always occur from blood pumped through the dialysis circuit to cooler environment, predisposing for hypothermia. Blood flow and effluent flows are the most important parameters causing heat loss. We investigated and compared the novel TherMax warmer to previous generation technologies during CRRT in a multicenter setting. This was a prospective observational multicenter study with historic single-center controls. The study group consisted of 100 patients in eight Swedish ICUs with clinical indication for CRRT, using... (More)

One risk of continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) is inadvertent hypothermia (IH), which is defined as a non-therapeutic core temperature decrease below normal. In continuous renal replacement therapy, heat loss will always occur from blood pumped through the dialysis circuit to cooler environment, predisposing for hypothermia. Blood flow and effluent flows are the most important parameters causing heat loss. We investigated and compared the novel TherMax warmer to previous generation technologies during CRRT in a multicenter setting. This was a prospective observational multicenter study with historic single-center controls. The study group consisted of 100 patients in eight Swedish ICUs with clinical indication for CRRT, using the PrisMax platform and TherMax warmer. Both patient and set warmer temperatures were recorded hourly for the first 24 h. The presence of treatment hours in hypothermia (< 36.0 Celsius) and the difference between set warmer temperature and measured patient temperature in the multi-center study cohort were compared to a matched single-center historic control cohort treated with the old Prismaflex platform and adjacent Barkey warmer. In the TherMax group 77/100 (77.0%) of patients, and for controls 26/86 (30.2%) of patients were free of hypothermia (Chi square, p < 0.001). The mean number of hours spent in hypothermia was (mean ± SD) 0.66 ± 1.60 and 6.92 ± 7.79 h in the TherMax and control groups, respectively (Chi square p < 0.001). In the study group the patient temperature was higher than the set temperature on the warmer with a difference of Δ0.47 ± 0.80 °C (minor difference), whereas in the control group the set temperature on the warmer was higher than the patient temperature with a difference of Δ4.55 ± 1.00 °C (over-correction). The novel TherMax warmer technology protected against hypothermia and was significantly more accurate than the Barkey warmer.

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author
; ; ; ; ; ; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
AKI, Blood warming devices, Critical illness, CRRT, Hypothermia
in
Scientific Reports
volume
14
issue
1
article number
23162
publisher
Nature Publishing Group
external identifiers
  • scopus:85205789960
  • pmid:39369021
ISSN
2045-2322
DOI
10.1038/s41598-024-74977-2
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.
id
51e5b852-9417-4443-b58f-661c554da2dc
date added to LUP
2024-11-26 13:03:40
date last changed
2025-06-11 04:52:57
@article{51e5b852-9417-4443-b58f-661c554da2dc,
  abstract     = {{<p>One risk of continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) is inadvertent hypothermia (IH), which is defined as a non-therapeutic core temperature decrease below normal. In continuous renal replacement therapy, heat loss will always occur from blood pumped through the dialysis circuit to cooler environment, predisposing for hypothermia. Blood flow and effluent flows are the most important parameters causing heat loss. We investigated and compared the novel TherMax warmer to previous generation technologies during CRRT in a multicenter setting. This was a prospective observational multicenter study with historic single-center controls. The study group consisted of 100 patients in eight Swedish ICUs with clinical indication for CRRT, using the PrisMax platform and TherMax warmer. Both patient and set warmer temperatures were recorded hourly for the first 24 h. The presence of treatment hours in hypothermia (&lt; 36.0 Celsius) and the difference between set warmer temperature and measured patient temperature in the multi-center study cohort were compared to a matched single-center historic control cohort treated with the old Prismaflex platform and adjacent Barkey warmer. In the TherMax group 77/100 (77.0%) of patients, and for controls 26/86 (30.2%) of patients were free of hypothermia (Chi square, p &lt; 0.001). The mean number of hours spent in hypothermia was (mean ± SD) 0.66 ± 1.60 and 6.92 ± 7.79 h in the TherMax and control groups, respectively (Chi square p &lt; 0.001). In the study group the patient temperature was higher than the set temperature on the warmer with a difference of Δ0.47 ± 0.80 °C (minor difference), whereas in the control group the set temperature on the warmer was higher than the patient temperature with a difference of Δ4.55 ± 1.00 °C (over-correction). The novel TherMax warmer technology protected against hypothermia and was significantly more accurate than the Barkey warmer.</p>}},
  author       = {{Bell, Max and Hertzberg, Daniel and Hansson, Fredrik and Carlsson, Åsa and Berkius, Johan and Vimlati, Laszlo and Nilsson, Ann Kristin and Ekström, Carolina and Broman, Marcus}},
  issn         = {{2045-2322}},
  keywords     = {{AKI; Blood warming devices; Critical illness; CRRT; Hypothermia}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  publisher    = {{Nature Publishing Group}},
  series       = {{Scientific Reports}},
  title        = {{Modern CRRT systems are associated with lower risk of hypothermia}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-74977-2}},
  doi          = {{10.1038/s41598-024-74977-2}},
  volume       = {{14}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}