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Association Between Temperature During Intensive Care Unit and Mortality in Patients With Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome.

Yi-Peng FangYun-Fei ZhangXianxi HuangQian LiuYueyang LiChenxi JiaLingbin HeChun-Hong RenXin Zhang
Published in: Therapeutic hypothermia and temperature management (2023)
The relationship between body temperature changes and prognosis in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) remains inconclusive. Our study aimed to investigate the clinical value of body temperature in the management of ARDS. Data from the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care III database were collected. Adult patients with ARDS were enrolled and further grouped based on their temperature values in the intensive care unit. Both the maximum (temperature max ) and minimum (temperature min ) temperatures were used. The primary outcome was 28-day mortality rate. Polynomial regression, subgroup analysis, and logistic regression analysis were performed in the final analysis. A total of 3922 patients with ARDS were enrolled. There was a U-shaped relationship between 28-day mortality and body temperature. For patients with infection, the elevated temperature max (≥37.0°C) was associated with decreased mortality, with an odds ratio ranging from 0.39 to 0.49, using temperature max from 36.5°C to 36.9°C as reference. For patients without infection, a similar tendency was observed, but the protective effect was lost at extremely high temperatures (≥38.0°C, p  < 0.05). Elevated temperature min (≥37.0°C) and decreased temperature min (<35.0°C) were associated with increased mortality, using the temperature min from 36.0°C to 36.9°C as a reference. Hypothermia was associated with increased mortality in patients with ARDS, while the effect of hyperthermia (≥37.0°C) on the mortality of patients with ARDS was not fully consistent in the infection and noninfection subgroups. Short-term and transient temperatures above 37.0°C would be beneficial to patients with ARDS, but extreme hyperthermia and persistent temperatures above 37.0°C should be avoided.
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