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. 2022 Oct 17;12:98. doi: 10.1186/s13613-022-01072-y

Table 1.

Main studies investigating fluid administration in acute pancreatitis

Authors Study design Type of IV fluid Rate of administration Resuscitation endpoint Study endpoint Results
De-Madaria E, [130] RCT (n = 249) RL Aggressive: bolus 20 ml/kg–3 ml/kg/h Moderate: bolus 10 ml/kg–1.5 ml/kg/h. In both groups, assessments at 3, 12, 24, 48, and 72 h to check for fluid overload or hypovolemia BUN, Ht, UO, signs of dehydration, SBP Development of moderately severe or severe pancreatitis during the hospitalization. Safety outcome signs of fluid overload No difference in the primary outcome between the two groups. Higher incidence of fluid overload in the aggressive resuscitation group
Gad MM, [39] Metanalysis (n = 2686) / Aggressive vs Non-aggressive / Mortality, PN, OF, AKI, RF No difference between the two groups
Li L, [134] RC (n = 912) / Rapid: ≥ 3 ml/kg/h Slow: < 3 ml/kg/h / Rate of MV, LOS MV and hospital LOS associated with rapid FT in SAP and Ht ≥ 44%
Cuèllar-Monterrubio JE, [135] RCT (n = 88) Hartmann solution Aggressive: bolus 20 ml/kg–3 ml/kg/h for 24 h -30 ml/kg/day Non-aggressive: 1.5 ml/kg/h for 24 h, then 30 ml/kg/day Vital signs, UO, BUN, Ht, lactate, SIRS Development of SIRS and OF No difference in outcome
Ye B, [88] RC (n = 179) NS, RL

Aggressive (> 4 L/day)

Non-aggressive (< 4 L/day)

Vital sign, UO > 0.5 ml/kg/h, Ht < 45%

AKI development

Chloride exposure

 > 4 L/day and higher chloride exposure associated with AKI
Yamashita T, [51] RC (n = 1097) /

Aggressive ≥ 6 lt/day

Non-aggressive < 6 lt/day

/ In-hospital mortality  ≥ 6 L within 24 h associated with less mortality
Buxbaum JL, [131] RCT (n = 60) RL

Aggressive: 20 ml/h bolus + 3 ml/kg/h

Standard: 10 ml/h + 1.5 ml/kg/h (median 3.91 L/24 h)

Ht, BUN, Cr

Decrease in Ht, BUN, Cr

Reduced pain

Tolerance to oral feeding

Higher clinical improvement, reduced SIRS development, and less hemoconcentration in Aggressive group
Singh VK, [77] RC (n = 1010) /

FVER

Group I < 500 ml

Group II 500–1000 ml

Group III > 1000 ml

FV24

Group I < 3200 ml

Group II 3200 – 4300 ml

Group III > 4300 ml

/ LC, OF, Invasive treatment, mortality

FVER 500–1000 ml and > 1000 ml associated with better outcomes

FV24 > 4300 ml associated with higher LC

Weitz [136] RC (n = 391) Ringer’s solution / / Severity, LC, OF, PN Higher fluid volume associated with severity and LC
Wall I, [50] RC (n = 286) /

Until year 1998 = 113 ml/h in first 6 h

From 1998 to 2008 = 284 ml/h in first 6 h

/ OF, PN, mortality Less mortality and PN up to year 2008
Warndorf MG, [49] RC (n = 434) NS (in 85% of cases)

Early FT: ≥ 1/3 of the total 72 h fluid volume administered in the first 24 h

Late FT: < 1/3 administered in the first 24 h (2.403 ml/24 h)

/ Mortality, SIRS, OF, ICU, LOS Less SIRS, ICU, OF associated with early FT
De-Madaria E, [74] RC (n = 247)

NS plus

D5%/D10%

FT volume in first 24 h:

Group A: < 3.1 L

Group B: 3.1 – 4.1 L

Group C: > 4.1 L

Ht < 44%, UO > 50 ml/h, low Cr, normal SBP OF, PN, APFC, mortality Group C had more RF and AKI rate
Kuwabara K, [76] RC (n = 9849) Crystalloids

FV48

FVR

/ Mortality, MV, Dialysis

Higher FV48 associated with increased rate of MV, dialysis, mortality

Higher FVR associated with lower mortality in the severe AP group

Wu B, [47] RCT NS vs RL Standard 20 ml/kg bolus + 3 ml/kg/h vs physician judgment BUN SIRS No difference between different rates; difference between RL and NS
Mole DJ, [137] RC (n = 30) NS, HS, D5-50%, sodium bicarbonate, phosphate; colloids (Gelofusine, Albumin 4.5%); blood products / Physician’s judgment Volume of fluids administered Less fluids associated with higher mortality
Gardner TB, [48] RC (n = 45) NS (71%), D5% + NaCl 0.45% (20%), RL (9%)

Early FT: 203 ml/h in first 24 h

Late FT: 71 ml/h in first 24 h

/ Mortality, OF, LOS Higher mortality rate in Agg group
Mao E, [79] RCT (n = 115) NS, RL, plasma, HES 6% Depending on goal-Ht

Ht < 35% vs

 > 35%

Incidence of sepsis, mortality Goal Ht < 35%: major incidence of sepsis and higher mortality rate. Higher amount of fluid volume
Mao E, [78] RCT (n = 76) NS, RL, plasma, HES 6%

Group I: 10–15 ml/kg/h

Group II: 5–10 ml/kg/h

HR, MAP, UO, Ht < 35% APACHE II score, MV, ACS and sepsis incidence, mortality Group I: higher incidence of MV and ACS, higher mortality rate
Eckerwall G [75] RC (n = 99) Crystalloids, Colloids (mainly albumin)

 > 4000 ml/24 h

Vs< 4000 ml/24 h

/ Respiratory complications, ICU admission rate, mortality More respiratory complications and need for intensive care admissions with > 4000 ml/24 h

/ Not specified; AKI Acute kidney injury; APFC Acute peripancreatic fluid collections; ACS Acute Compartment Syndrome; BUN Blood urea nitrogen; Cr Creatinine; D5–10–50% Dextrose solution 5–10–50%; FT fluid therapy; FVER Fluid Volume in Emergency Room, within 4 h from admission; FV24 Fluid volume administered in first 24 h, since admission to the hospital ward. FV48 Fluid volume per day in the initial 48 h; FVR (Fluid volume ratio) Average fluid volume per day in the first 48 h, compared to fluid volume per day during total hospitalization; HD Hemodialysis; Ht Hematocrit; HES 6% Hydroxyethyl starch 6%; ICU Intensive Care Unit; LOS Hospital Length of stay; LC Local complications; MV Mechanical ventilation; NS Normal saline; PN Pancreatic necrosis; OF organ failure; RF Respiratory failure; RC Retrospective Cohort, RCT Randomized Clinical Trial; RL Ringer Lactate; SBP Systolic blood pressure; SIRS Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome; UO Urinary output