Title
Balanced fluid or 0.9% saline in children treated for septic shock
Link to article in PubMed
Author(s)
Balamuth, Fran
Weiss, Scott
Long, Elliot
Thompson, Graham
Artis, Amanda
Campos, Atzael
Borland, Meredith
Dalziel, Stuart
Yock-Corrales, Adriana
Singh, Ruchi
Williams, Amanda
Mickiewicz, Beata
Hickey, Christopher
Fitzgerald, Julie
Laskin, Benjamin
Hickey, Robert
Eckerle, Michelle
Alqurashi, Waleed
Alpern, Elizabeth
Ambroggio, Lilliam
Badawy, Mohamed
Baumer-Mouradian, Shannon
Berthelot, Simon
Clukies, Lindsay
Curtis, Sarah
Davis, Adrienne
Duffy, Susan
Eisenberg, Matthew
Emsley, Jason
Festekjian, Ara
George, Shane
Green, Rebecca
Gripp, Karen
Jain, Priya
Jani, Shefali
Joubert, Gary
Judge, Pavan
Kam, April
Kochar, Amit
Koutroulis, Ioannis
Kwok, Maria
Lane, Roni D
Lloyd, Julia
Mansour, Karim
McManemy, Julie
Morris, Claudia
Phillips, Natalie
Rao, Arjun
Rogers, Alexander
Sehgal, Anupam
Shayan, Yasaman
Silverman, Jonathan
Tan, Eunicia
Uspal, Neil
Vance, Cheryl
Whyte, Emma
Huang, Jing
Freedman, Stephen
Babl, Franz
Kuppermann, Nathan
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Whether treatment with balanced crystalloid fluid leads to better outcomes than 0.9% saline in children treated for septic shock is debated.
METHODS: In this pragmatic clinical trial conducted at 47 emergency departments in five countries, patients (2 months to <18 years of age) with suspected septic shock and abnormal perfusion were randomly assigned to receive fluid resuscitation with either balanced fluid or 0.9% saline for up to 48 hours. The primary outcome was a major adverse kidney event (a composite of death, new renal-replacement therapy, or persistent kidney dysfunction) at 30 days after enrollment or hospital discharge, whichever occurred first.
RESULTS: Of 9041 enrolled patients, 277 (6.1%) in the balanced-fluid group and 282 (6.2%) in the 0.9%-saline group withdrew from the trial, leaving 4235 and 4247 patients, respectively, for analysis. A primary-outcome event occurred in 137 patients (3.4%) in the balanced-fluid group and in 124 (3.0%) in the 0.9%-saline group (difference, 0.4 percentage points; 95% confidence interval [CI], -0.5 to 1.3; risk ratio, 1.10; 95% CI, 0.88 to 1.40; P = 0.85). The median number of hospital-free days during 28 days after enrollment was 23 (interquartile range, 19 to 25) in both groups. Hyperchloremia occurred in 868 patients (31.4%) in the balanced-fluid group and in 1383 (49.0%) in the 0.9%-saline group; hypernatremia in 52 (1.8%) and 89 (3.1%), respectively; and hyperlactatemia in 260 (19.8%) and 228 (16.7%). No differences in other safety outcomes or adverse events were seen.
CONCLUSIONS: Among children treated for septic shock, no significant difference was seen in the incidence of death, new renal-replacement therapy, or persistent kidney dysfunction when fluid resuscitation was administered with balanced fluid as compared with 0.9% saline. (Funded by Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and others; PRoMPT BOLUS ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04102371.).
METHODS: In this pragmatic clinical trial conducted at 47 emergency departments in five countries, patients (2 months to <18 years of age) with suspected septic shock and abnormal perfusion were randomly assigned to receive fluid resuscitation with either balanced fluid or 0.9% saline for up to 48 hours. The primary outcome was a major adverse kidney event (a composite of death, new renal-replacement therapy, or persistent kidney dysfunction) at 30 days after enrollment or hospital discharge, whichever occurred first.
RESULTS: Of 9041 enrolled patients, 277 (6.1%) in the balanced-fluid group and 282 (6.2%) in the 0.9%-saline group withdrew from the trial, leaving 4235 and 4247 patients, respectively, for analysis. A primary-outcome event occurred in 137 patients (3.4%) in the balanced-fluid group and in 124 (3.0%) in the 0.9%-saline group (difference, 0.4 percentage points; 95% confidence interval [CI], -0.5 to 1.3; risk ratio, 1.10; 95% CI, 0.88 to 1.40; P = 0.85). The median number of hospital-free days during 28 days after enrollment was 23 (interquartile range, 19 to 25) in both groups. Hyperchloremia occurred in 868 patients (31.4%) in the balanced-fluid group and in 1383 (49.0%) in the 0.9%-saline group; hypernatremia in 52 (1.8%) and 89 (3.1%), respectively; and hyperlactatemia in 260 (19.8%) and 228 (16.7%). No differences in other safety outcomes or adverse events were seen.
CONCLUSIONS: Among children treated for septic shock, no significant difference was seen in the incidence of death, new renal-replacement therapy, or persistent kidney dysfunction when fluid resuscitation was administered with balanced fluid as compared with 0.9% saline. (Funded by Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and others; PRoMPT BOLUS ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04102371.).
Publication information
N Engl J Med. 2026 Apr 24. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa2601969. Online ahead of print.
Date Issued
2026-04-24
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
The New England journal of medicine
Permanent link to this record
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