Oxygen in Critically Ill Patients: Too Much of a Good Thing Might Do Harm

Authors: Ferguson ND., JAMA 2016 Oct 18; 316:1553

Outcomes were worse with a conventional high-oxygenation goal than with a conservative moderate-oxygenation goal.

Increasingly, excess oxygen administration is recognized as a risk factor for adverse outcomes when used perioperatively (NEJM JW Infect Dis Nov 2009 and JAMA 2009; 302:1543) or after myocardial infarction (NEJM JW Hosp Med Aug 2015 and Circulation2015; 131:2143). But is excessive oxygen harmful in the intensive care unit (ICU) setting?

In this open-label, single-center Italian trial, 480 adults who were admitted to the ICU with >3 days expected length of stay were randomized to receive either a conservative oxygen strategy (lowest possible fraction of inspired oxygen [FiO2] to keep arterial oxyhemoglobin saturation [SpO2] at 94%–98% or partial pressure of O2 [PaO2] at 70 mm Hg–100 mm Hg) or a conventional ICU oxygen protocol (FiO2 ≥0.4 to keep SpO2 at 97%–100% and PaO2≤150 mm Hg). The study was stopped early (72% of planned recruitment) after an earthquake damaged the study hospital.

Patients in the conservative-oxygen group were significantly less likely to die in the ICU than were those in the standard-care group (12% vs. 20%; number needed to treat, 12) and had significantly lower likelihood of shock (4% vs. 11%), liver failure (2% vs. 6%), and bacteremia (5% vs. 10%), despite having only a moderately lower median PaO2 than the standard-care group (87 mm Hg vs. 102 mm Hg).

 

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