Intravenous saline solutions were first introduced into clinical practice in the Sunderland cholera epidemic of 1831 [1]. More than 150 years later, not only is 0.9 % saline the most commonly used intravenous fluid in critically ill patients, it is also the fluid that has been administered to the largest number of critically ill patients in randomised controlled trials [2, 3]. It is cheap and readily available, and more than a million litres of intravenous 0.9 % saline are administered to patients around the world every day [1]; however, although it is widely known as ‘normal saline’, 0.9 % saline is neither normal nor physiological [4]. In fact, the concentration of chloride in 0.9 % saline is approximately 1.5 times that of normal plasma. Compared to low chloride solutions like Hartmann’s, rapid infusion of 0.9 % saline results in acidosis due to reduced strong ion difference, reduced renal perfusion and glomerular filtration rate, a tendency towards reduced urinary output, and even a pronounced increase in body weight [5, 6]. Recent data raise the possibility that administration of 0.9 % saline [7] may be harmful and suggest that using ‘balanced’ solutions with lower, more physiological, chloride concentrations than 0.9 % saline may be preferable [8–10].
The relationship between the serum chloride concentration and outcome appears to be ‘U-shaped’ so that values outside of the normal physiological range are associated with an increased risk of death [11]. Positive fluid balance is also associated with an increased risk of death [12]. Because chloride loading and volume loading often occur together the relative contributions of chloride overload and volume overload to the apparent increased mortality risk are uncertain. In this issue of Intensive Care Medicine, Shaw and colleagues examine, among other things, the association between the ‘volume-adjusted chloride load’ and in-hospital mortality in more than 100,000 patients with tachycardia (heart rate over 90 bpm) and at least one other systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) criterion [13]. The purpose of this was to demonstrate the association between chloride administration and outcome independent of administered fluid volume. In doing so, Shaw and colleagues were able to demonstrate, for the first time, an association between increasing amounts of chloride administered during crystalloid resuscitation and increased in-hospital mortality which persisted after controlling for the total volume of fluid administered [13], raising the possibility that the chloride content of resuscitation fluids might be a modifiable risk factor for adverse outcomes.
This study adds to previous data which demonstrated an association between the use of chloride-rich fluids and adverse outcomes compared to the use of balanced solutions in surgical patients [9] and patients with sepsis [10] and is consistent with a single centre, open label, before-and-after period pilot study which showed that a strategy of avoiding chloride-rich fluid improved renal outcomes [8]. Overall, it appears that the association between the administration of chloride-rich fluids and adverse outcomes is robust, reproducible and most likely “dose dependent”. Although the hypothesis is that chloride administration is harmful, the authors themselves acknowledge that the effects of sodium and chloride administration are difficult to tease apart. Their data indicate that in patients receiving fluid volumes greater than 3,000 ml, increased mortality may occur also with volume-adjusted sodium load with the lowest risk being seen in the range of 135–145 mmol/l. This is consistent with previous data showing that acquired hypernatraemia is associated with adverse outcomes [14]. Shaw’s study, like almost all previous studies comparing 0.9 % saline to balanced crystalloids, is highly subject to confounding. There may well be systematic differences, beyond the use of 0.9 % saline vs. balanced crystalloids, between the types of patients who receive higher vs. lower ‘volume-independent chloride loads’. Similarly, the treatment provided by doctors who chose to administer fluids with lower chloride concentrations may be systematically different to that provided by doctors using 0.9 % saline. These factors may not be captured in a database and cannot be controlled for in a retrospective study. Finally, it must be considered that overall mortality in the investigated cohort was low and when performing a multivariate analysis the increased risk of mortality was around 1 % (OR 1.011, CI 1.008–1.014) when volume-adjusted chloride load was greater than 110 mmol/l.
Despite this, the hypothesis that balanced crystalloids offer a safer alternative to fluid resuscitation than 0.9 % saline is a compelling one and, with this hypothesis in mind, a co-ordinated programme of interventional studies comparing 0.9 % saline to a balanced solution is underway in Australia and New Zealand. The first of the studies making up this programme, the SPLIT trial, compared 0.9 % saline to Plasma-Lyte® 148 for ICU fluid therapy in more than 2,000 patients and completed recruitment on 14 October 2014 [15]. This study should be reported by mid 2015 and will provide greater clarity in this area. Another unresolved issue is which anion to use instead of chloride. Some balanced solutions use lactate, others acetate or combinations of acetate and malate (Table 1). Whether the type of anion (buffer) makes any difference is largely unknown. When orienting at plasma composition it should probably be bicarbonate; however, this would require a more complicated and thus costly production process (i.e. two-chamber systems) to ensure stability.
Until large-scale randomised trials demonstrate that balanced crystalloids are superior to 0.9 % saline, clinicians should remain sceptical and equipoise should persist. While some may chose to use balanced crystalloids in preference to 0.9 % saline, those who chose to continue to use 0.9 % saline should reassure themselves that their practice is supported by 150 years of clinical experience [1] and that more 7,000 ICU patients have received 0.9 % saline in randomised controlled trials [2, 3].
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Conflicts of interest
Dr Young reports the receipt of an honorarium of less than 1,500 € from Baxter for consulting activities. Dr Young is the Chief Investigator for the SPLIT study which is an investigator-initiated study funded by the Health Research Council of New Zealand and Baxter Healthcare. Dr Joannidis reports receipt of a speaker’s honorarium of less than 1,500 € from Baxter Healthcare.
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Young, P.J., Joannidis, M. Crystalloid fluid therapy: is the balance tipping towards balanced solutions?. Intensive Care Med 40, 1966–1968 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-014-3531-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-014-3531-1