EFFECTIVENESS OF REHABILITATION INTERVENTIONS IN ADULTS WITH MULTI-ORGAN DYSFUNCTION SYNDROME: A RAPID REVIEW

Chiara Arienti, PhD 1, Stefano G. Lazzarini, PT1, Elisa Pollini, MD1, Michele Patrini, MD1, Carlotte Kiekens, MD,3 and Stefano Negrini, MD4,5

From the 1IRCCS Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi, Milan, Italy, 2Montecatone Rehabilitation Institute SpA, Imola, Bologna, Italy, 3University Hospitals Leuven – KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium, 4Laboratory of Evidence-based rehabilitation, IRCCS Istituto Ortopedico Galeazzi and 5Department of Biomedical, Surgical and Dental Sciences, University “La Statale”, Milan, Italy

ABSTRACT

Background: Multiple organ dysfunction syndrome, defined as altered organ function in critically ill patients, is a possible consequence of COVID-19. Investigating the current evidence is therefore crucial in this pandemic, as early rehabilitation could be effective for the functioning of patients with multiple organ failure. This rapid review assesses the effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions in adults with multiple organ dysfunction syndrome.

Methods: A rapid review was conducted including only randomised control trials, published until 30 November 2020. All databases were investigated and the results synthesized narratively, evaluating the risk of bias and quality of evidence in all included studies.

Results: A total of 404 records were identified through database searches. After removal of duplicates 346 articles remained. After screening, 3 studies (90 participants) met the inclusion criteria. All studies reported positive effects of neuromuscular electrical stimulation on muscle mass preservation compared with no treatment or standard physiotherapy.

Conclusion: The lack of evidence on the effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions does not allow any firm conclusion to be drawn. Neuromuscular electrical stimulation might be a possible rehabilitation intervention to prevent muscle volume loss and improve function in patients with multiple organ dysfunction syndrome. However, further studies are needed to support these preliminary findings.

Key words: multiple organ failure; rehabilitation; rapid review.

Accepted May 11, 2021; Epub ahead of print May 26, 2021

J Rehabil Med 2021; 53: jrm00221

Correspondence address: Michele Patrini, IRCCS Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi, Milan, Italy. E-mail: mpatrini@dongnocchi.it

LAY ABSTRACT

This paper synthesizes the current evidence on the effects of rehabilitation interventions in patients with multi-organ dysfunction syndrome. The results show that neuromuscular electrical stimulation may be a feasible treatment to prevent muscle mass loss and increase upper and lower limb strength in this population. Following multi-organ dysfunction syndrome people frequently experience new or worsened disabilities. Therefore, it is relevant to provide the clinician with the best current evidence on treatment that could be applied in the acute phase, in order to enhance the recovery of these patients. This is even more applicable while the COVID-19 pandemic is raging globally, as multi-organ dysfunction syndrome is one of the worst possible consequences of the disease.

INTRODUCTION

Multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS) is defined as altered organ function in an acutely ill patient (1). MODS usually involves 2 or more organ systems among the respiratory, cardiovascular, renal, hepatic, gastrointestinal, haematological, endocrine, and central nervous system (2). Once the syndrome has developed, there is no effective therapy for modulating the inflammatory response and reducing the severity of MODS. Therefore, treatment is focused on prevention and treating individual organ dysfunction as it develops, and supportive measures are required (3).

The survival of critically ill patients is frequently associated with significant functional impairment and reduced health-related quality of life (4). Although the pathophysiology of MODS is not entirely understood, the dysregulated immune response to critical illness plays a central role in determining the severity of the disease (3). MODS can be classified as primary (immediately after several specific traumas, such as extensive injuries of tissues, hypoxia and the ischaemia-reperfusion syndrome) or secondary (end-stage of a systemic inflammatory response syndrome, commonly involving sepsis) (5). The clinical course of MODS is divided by the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score system into 4 stages, according to the degree of dysfunction of 6 organ systems (respiration, coagulation, liver, cardiovascular, central nervous system, renal). The SOFA score is instrumental in predicting the outcome (6). Independent of the initial score, an increase in SOFA during the first 48 h in the intensive care unit (ICU) predicts a mortality rate of at least 50% (7). The first clinical objective in MODS is always patient survival. Having assured survival, the objective shifts into improvement in as much as possible of health-related quality of life, reducing any organ dysfunction, and preventing all the possible sequelae of MODS or a long period of hospitalization (8). Therefore, rehabilitation interventions could cover an essential role in the accomplishment of functional recovery.

MODS is one of the worst possible manifestations of COVID-19, along with respiratory failure, neurological symptoms, septic shock, or a combination of all of these (9). To date, there is no effective treatment for COVID-19, except for supportive care, including oxygen and mechanical ventilation. As with MODS, severely ill patients with COVID-19 require a lengthy period of hospitalization and experience a massive alteration in their life (10). Due to the similarities, rehabilitation interventions for MODS could also help manage patients with COVID-19. Therefore, a rapid review of rehabilitation interventions for MODS could be highly relevant in the current pandemic, because it is a form of knowledge synthesis that accelerates the process of conducting a traditional systematic review, to produce evidence for stakeholders in a resource-efficient manner under pandemic circumstances (11).

This rapid review assessed the effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions on functional outcomes in adults with MODS.

METHODS

A rapid review of rehabilitation interventions in adults with MODS was performed. The review was conducted following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines (12) and the Interim Guidance from the Cochrane Rapid Reviews Methods Group (13). The protocol was registered on PROSPERO (CRD42020222599).

Selection criteria

Type of study. The review included only randomized controlled trials (RCTs) addressing the effects of rehabilitation interventions in patients with multiple organ failure.

Population. Considering the high variability in the definition of MODS in epidemiology and in the clinical outcomes in diverse healthcare settings, the review included studies involving adults with 2 or more organ dysfunctions diagnosed with SOFA (14).

Interventions. The review included studies addressing rehabilitation interventions, defined according to the classificatory items relevant to rehabilitation defined by Cochrane Rehabilitation (15): “all interventions provided or prescribed by rehabilitation professionals to enable people with disabilities to attain, or maintain, their maximum independence; all the interventions provided by rehabilitation professionals to prevent secondary health conditions or complications arising from a primary health condition, and all physical modalities, manual therapies, exercise therapies, prosthetic and orthotic interventions and adaptive technologies for disabilities”. Interventions aiming to maintain or prevent worsening of the clinical condition, such as electrical stimulation or patient positioning, were also included. Pharmacological or surgical interventions were not considered rehabilitation approaches and were therefore excluded.

Comparator(s). The review included studies that compared the rehabilitation interventions with any other type of intervention or with no intervention.

Outcomes. Considering the complexity and heterogeneity of outcomes related to the improvement in MODS in a rehabilitation context, it was decided to categorize the primary outcomes according to the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) (16), as follows: