Skip to main content
Article
The ED-SED Study: A Multicenter, Prospective Cohort Study of Practice Patterns and Clinical Outcomes Associated With Emergency Department SEDation for Mechanically Ventilated Patients.
Critical care medicine
  • Brian M Fuller
  • Brian W Roberts
  • Nicholas M Mohr
  • William A Knight
  • Opeolu Adeoye
  • Ryan D Pappal
  • Stacy Marshall
  • Robert Alunday
  • Matthew Dettmer
  • Munish Goyal
  • Colin Gibson
  • Brian J Levine
  • Jayna Gardner-Gray, Henry Ford Health
  • Jarrod Mosier
  • James Dargin
  • Fraser Mackay
  • Nicholas J Johnson
  • Sharukh Lokhandwala
  • Catherine L Hough
  • Joseph E Tonna
  • Rachel Tsolinas
  • Frederick Lin
  • Zaffer A Qasim
  • Carrie E Harvey
  • Benjamin Bassin
  • Robert J Stephens
  • Yan Yan
  • Christopher R Carpenter
  • Marin H Kollef
  • Michael S Avidan
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-7-2019
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To characterize emergency department sedation practices in mechanically ventilated patients, and test the hypothesis that deep sedation in the emergency department is associated with worse outcomes.

DESIGN: Multicenter, prospective cohort study.

SETTING: The emergency department and ICUs of 15 medical centers.

PATIENTS: Mechanically ventilated adult emergency department patients.

INTERVENTIONS: None.

MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: All data involving sedation (medications, monitoring) were recorded. Deep sedation was defined as Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale of -3 to -5 or Sedation-Agitation Scale of 2 or 1. A total of 324 patients were studied. Emergency department deep sedation was observed in 171 patients (52.8%), and was associated with a higher frequency of deep sedation in the ICU on day 1 (53.8% vs 20.3%; p < 0.001) and day 2 (33.3% vs 16.9%; p = 0.001), when compared to light sedation. Mean (SD) ventilator-free days were 18.1 (10.8) in the emergency department deep sedation group compared to 20.0 (9.8) in the light sedation group (mean difference, 1.9; 95% CI, -0.40 to 4.13). Similar results according to emergency department sedation depth existed for ICU-free days (mean difference, 1.6; 95% CI, -0.54 to 3.83) and hospital-free days (mean difference, 2.3; 95% CI, 0.26-4.32). Mortality was 21.1% in the deep sedation group and 17.0% in the light sedation group (between-group difference, 4.1%; odds ratio, 1.30; 0.74-2.28). The occurrence rate of acute brain dysfunction (delirium and coma) was 68.4% in the deep sedation group and 55.6% in the light sedation group (between-group difference, 12.8%; odds ratio, 1.73; 1.10-2.73).

CONCLUSIONS: Early deep sedation in the emergency department is common, carries over into the ICU, and may be associated with worse outcomes. Sedation practice in the emergency department and its association with clinical outcomes is in need of further investigation.

PubMed ID
31393323
ePublication
ePub ahead of print
Citation Information
Fuller BM, Roberts BW, Mohr NM, Knight WAt, Adeoye O, Pappal RD, Marshall S, Alunday R, Dettmer M, Goyal M, Gibson C, Levine BJ, Gardner-Gray JM, Mosier J, Dargin J, Mackay F, Johnson NJ, Lokhandwala S, Hough CL, Tonna JE, Tsolinas R, Lin F, Qasim ZA, Harvey CE, Bassin B, Stephens RJ, Yan Y, Carpenter CR, Kollef MH, and Avidan MS. The ED-SED Study: A Multicenter, Prospective Cohort Study of Practice Patterns and Clinical Outcomes Associated With Emergency Department SEDation for Mechanically Ventilated Patients. Crit Care Med 2019.