The Potential Synergistic Risk of Albuterol and Vasoactives in Acute Lung Injury Trials.
Pubmed ID: 36189647
Pubmed Central ID: PMC10066837
Journal: The Annals of pharmacotherapy
Publication Date: July 1, 2023
MeSH Terms: Humans, Intensive Care Units, Acute Lung Injury, Albuterol, Administration, Intravenous, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions
Grants: UL1 TR002378, KL2 TR002381, R00 HL141685, R03 AI152003
Authors: Zhang D, Chase A, Almuntashiri S, Sikora A
Cite As: Almuntashiri S, Chase A, Sikora A, Zhang D. The Potential Synergistic Risk of Albuterol and Vasoactives in Acute Lung Injury Trials. Ann Pharmacother 2023 Jul;57(7):757-761. Epub 2022 Oct 2.
Studies:
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Critically ill patients are often prescribed both inhaled beta-agonists and intravenous vasoactive; however, the interaction of the additive beta-agonist effects of these 2 agents remains largely uncharacterized. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate how concomitant use of albuterol and vasoactive or inotropes affected ventilator-free days (VFDs) by re-analyzing the data from the Albuterol to Treat Acute Lung Injury (ALTA) trial. METHODS: In this study, subjects were grouped to albuterol-vasoactive (n = 84) <i>versus</i> (vs) placebo-vasoactive (n = 62). Ventilator-free days, intensive care unit (ICU)-free days, organ failure-free days, cardiovascular adverse events, and 90-day mortality were compared. The primary outcome was VFDs. RESULTS: Patients in the albuterol-vasoactive group had significantly fewer VFDs than patients in the placebo-vasoactive group (11 vs 19, <i>P</i> = 0.05). Patients in the albuterol-vasoactive group also had significantly fewer ICU-free days (9.5 vs 18.5, <i>P</i> = .006). The 90-day mortality was similar between groups (36.9% vs 27.4%, <i>P</i> = .20). Similarly, no significant difference in cardiac adverse events between the groups (14.3% vs 11.3%, <i>P</i> = 0.59). CONCLUSION AND RELEVANCE: This study has shown fewer VFDs for patients who received both vasoactive and albuterol. There were also fewer ICU-free days when compared to those on vasoactive only. Given the common use of both agents, a prospective evaluation of the additive adverse effects of beta-agonism is warranted.