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Dive into the research topics where Nicolas Mongardon is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicolas Mongardon.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2015

Intravascular Complications of Central Venous Catheterization by Insertion Site

Abstr Act; Jean-Jacques Parienti; Nicolas Mongardon; Bruno Mégarbane; Jean-Paul Mira; Pierre Kalfon; Antoine Gros; Sophie Marqué; Marie Thuong; Véronique Pottier; Michel Ramakers; Benoît Savary; Amélie Seguin; Xavier Valette; Nicolas Terzi; Bertrand Sauneuf; Vincent Cattoir; Leonard A. Mermel

BACKGROUND Three anatomical sites are commonly used to insert central venous catheters, but insertion at each site has the potential for major complications. METHODS In this multicenter trial, we randomly assigned nontunneled central venous catheterization in patients in the adult intensive care unit (ICU) to the subclavian, jugular, or femoral vein (in a 1:1:1 ratio if all three insertion sites were suitable [three-choice scheme] and in a 1:1 ratio if two sites were suitable [two-choice scheme]). The primary outcome measure was a composite of catheter-related bloodstream infection and symptomatic deep-vein thrombosis. RESULTS A total of 3471 catheters were inserted in 3027 patients. In the three-choice comparison, there were 8, 20, and 22 primary outcome events in the subclavian, jugular, and femoral groups, respectively (1.5, 3.6, and 4.6 per 1000 catheter-days; P=0.02). In pairwise comparisons, the risk of the primary outcome was significantly higher in the femoral group than in the subclavian group (hazard ratio, 3.5; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.5 to 7.8; P=0.003) and in the jugular group than in the subclavian group (hazard ratio, 2.1; 95% CI, 1.0 to 4.3; P=0.04), whereas the risk in the femoral group was similar to that in the jugular group (hazard ratio, 1.3; 95% CI, 0.8 to 2.1; P=0.30). In the three-choice comparison, pneumothorax requiring chest-tube insertion occurred in association with 13 (1.5%) of the subclavian-vein insertions and 4 (0.5%) of the jugular-vein insertions. CONCLUSIONS In this trial, subclavian-vein catheterization was associated with a lower risk of bloodstream infection and symptomatic thrombosis and a higher risk of pneumothorax than jugular-vein or femoral-vein catheterization. (Funded by the Hospital Program for Clinical Research, French Ministry of Health; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01479153.).


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2011

Early-onset pneumonia after cardiac arrest: characteristics, risk factors and influence on prognosis.

Sébastien Perbet; Nicolas Mongardon; Florence Dumas; Cédric Bruel; Virginie Lemiale; Bruno Mourvillier; Pierre Carli; Olivier Varenne; Jean-Paul Mira; Michel Wolff; Alain Cariou

RATIONALE Although frequent, little is known about early-onset pneumonia that occurs in the postresuscitation period. Although induced hypothermia is recommended as a method of improving neurological outcome, its influence on the occurrence of early-onset pneumonia is not well defined. OBJECTIVES To describe the incidence, risk factors, causative agents, and impact on outcome of early-onset pneumonia occurring within 3 days after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). METHODS Retrospective analysis of a large cohort study of all patients successfully resuscitated after OHCA and admitted from July 2002 to March 2008 in two medical intensive care units (ICUs). Patients who presented accidental hypothermia or a known pneumonia before OHCA, or patients who died within the first 24 hours, were excluded. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS During this 6-year period, 845 patients were admitted after OHCA, and 641 consecutive patients were included. A total of 500 patients (78%) were treated with therapeutic hypothermia. In the first 3 days, 419 (65%) presented early-onset pneumonia. Multivariate analysis disclosed therapeutic hypothermia as the single independent risk factor of early-onset pneumonia (odds ratio, 1.90; 95% confidence interval, 1.28-2.80; P = 0.001). Early-onset pneumonia increased length of mechanical ventilation (5.7 ± 5.9 vs. 4.7 ± 6.2 d; P = 0.001) and ICU stay (7.9 ± 7.2 versus 6.7 ± 7.6 d; P = 0.001), but did not influence incidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia (P = 0.25), favorable neurologic outcome (P = 0.35), or ICU mortality (P = 0.26). CONCLUSIONS After OHCA, therapeutic hypothermia is associated with an increased risk of early-onset pneumonia. This complication was associated with prolonged respiratory support and ICU stay, but did not significantly influence ICU mortality.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2013

Early identification of patients at risk for difficult intubation in the intensive care unit: development and validation of the MACOCHA score in a multicenter cohort study.

Audrey De Jong; Nicolas Molinari; Nicolas Terzi; Nicolas Mongardon; Jean-Michel Arnal; Christophe Guitton; Bernard Allaouchiche; Catherine Paugam-Burtz; Jean-Michel Constantin; Jean-Yves Lefrant; Marc Leone; Laurent Papazian; Karim Asehnoune; Nicolas Maziers; Elie Azoulay; Gael Pradel; Boris Jung; Samir Jaber

RATIONALE Difficult intubation in the intensive care unit (ICU) is a challenging issue. OBJECTIVES To develop and validate a simplified score for identifying patients with difficult intubation in the ICU and to report related complications. METHODS Data collected in a prospective multicenter study from 1,000 consecutive intubations from 42 ICUs were used to develop a simplified score of difficult intubation, which was then validated externally in 400 consecutive intubation procedures from 18 other ICUs and internally by bootstrap on 1,000 iterations. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS In multivariate analysis, the main predictors of difficult intubation (incidence = 11.3%) were related to patient (Mallampati score III or IV, obstructive sleep apnea syndrome, reduced mobility of cervical spine, limited mouth opening); pathology (severe hypoxia, coma); and operator (nonanesthesiologist). From the β parameter, a seven-item simplified score (MACOCHA score) was built, with an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.89 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.85-0.94). In the validation cohort (prevalence of difficult intubation = 8%), the AUC was 0.86 (95% CI, 0.76-0.96), with a sensitivity of 73%, a specificity of 89%, a negative predictive value of 98%, and a positive predictive value of 36%. After internal validation by bootstrap, the AUC was 0.89 (95% CI, 0.86-0.93). Severe life-threatening events (severe hypoxia, collapse, cardiac arrest, or death) occurred in 38% of the 1,000 cases. Patients with difficult intubation (n = 113) had significantly higher severe life-threatening complications than those who had a nondifficult intubation (51% vs. 36%; P < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS Difficult intubation in the ICU is strongly associated with severe life-threatening complications. A simple score including seven clinical items discriminates difficult and nondifficult intubation in the ICU. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT 01532063).


Resuscitation | 2012

Benefit of an early and systematic imaging procedure after cardiac arrest: Insights from the PROCAT (Parisian Region Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest) registry ☆

Jonathan Chelly; Nicolas Mongardon; Florence Dumas; Olivier Varenne; Christian Spaulding; Olivier Vignaux; Pierre Carli; Julien Charpentier; Frédéric Pène; Jean-Daniel Chiche; Jean-Paul Mira; Alain Cariou

AIMS Identification of the cause of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is of paramount importance. We investigated the ability of our imaging strategy to provide an early etiological diagnosis of OHCA and the influence of this strategy on ICU survival. METHODS Retrospective review of a prospectively acquired ICU database (01/2000-12/2010) including all OHCA patients without obvious extracardiac cause, for which an early diagnosis research was conducted (coronary angiography and/or brain and chest CT scan) within 24h after resuscitation. These procedures could be performed separately or be combined, according to a decision algorithm. RESULTS Of the 1274 patients admitted after OHCA during this 10-year period, the imaging strategy was applied in 896 patients. Patients who benefited from coronary angiography and/or CT scan were admitted to our ICU after a median delay of 180 [130-220]min after resuscitation. Seven hundred and forty-five coronary angiographies were performed, of which 452 (61%) identified at least one significant coronary lesion deemed responsible for the OHCA. CT-scan was performed in 355 patients and provided a diagnosis in 72 patients (20%), mainly stroke (n=38) and pulmonary embolism (n=19). Overall, this strategy allowed early diagnosis in 524 patients (59%). ICU survival was significantly higher for patients with a diagnosis identified by coronary angiography as compared with CT-scan (43% vs 10%, p<0.001). CONCLUSION The use of an early diagnosis protocol with immediate coronary angiography and/or CT scan provided the etiology of nearly two thirds of OHCA cases. In this large retrospective database, coronary angiography yielded a better diagnostic value than brain and/or chest CT-scan.


Critical Care | 2012

Epidemiology and outcome of severe pneumococcal pneumonia admitted to intensive care unit: a multicenter study

Nicolas Mongardon; Adeline Max; Adrien Bouglé; Frédéric Pène; Virginie Lemiale; Julien Charpentier; Alain Cariou; Jean-Daniel Chiche; Jean-Pierre Bedos; Jean-Paul Mira

IntroductionCommunity-acquired pneumonia (CAP) account for a high proportion of ICU admissions, with Streptococcus pneumoniae being the main pathogen responsible for these infections. However, little is known on the clinical features and outcomes of ICU patients with pneumococcal pneumonia. The aims of this study were to provide epidemiological data and to determine risk factors of mortality in patients admitted to ICU for severe S. pneumoniae CAP.MethodsWe performed a retrospective review of two prospectively-acquired multicentre ICU databases (2001-2008). Patients admitted for management of severe pneumococcal CAP were enrolled if they met the 2001 American Thoracic Society criteria for severe pneumonia, had life-threatening organ failure and had a positive microbiological sample for S. pneumoniae. Patients with bronchitis, aspiration pneumonia or with non-pulmonary pneumococcal infections were excluded.ResultsTwo hundred and twenty two patients were included, with a median SAPS II score reaching 47 [36-64]. Acute respiratory failure (n = 154) and septic shock (n = 54) were their most frequent causes of ICU admission. Septic shock occurred in 170 patients (77%) and mechanical ventilation was required in 186 patients (84%); renal replacement therapy was initiated in 70 patients (32%). Bacteraemia was diagnosed in 101 patients. The prevalence of S. pneumoniae strains with decreased susceptibility to penicillin was 39.7%. Although antibiotherapy was adequate in 92.3% of cases, hospital mortality reached 28.8%. In multivariate analysis, independent risk factors for mortality were age (OR 1.05 (95% CI: 1.02-1.08)), male sex (OR 2.83 (95% CI: 1.16-6.91)) and renal replacement therapy (OR 3.78 (95% CI: 1.71-8.36)). Co-morbidities, macrolide administration, concomitant bacteremia or penicillin susceptibility did not influence outcome.ConclusionsIn ICU, mortality of pneumococcal CAP remains high despite adequate antimicrobial treatment. Baseline demographic data and renal replacement therapy have a major impact on adverse outcome.


Critical Care Medicine | 2015

Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest from brain cause: epidemiology, clinical features, and outcome in a multicenter cohort*.

Michel Arnaout; Nicolas Mongardon; Nicolas Deye; Stéphane Legriel; Florence Dumas; Bertrand Sauneuf; Isabelle Malissin; Julien Charpentier; Frédéric Pène; Frédéric J. Baud; Jean-Daniel Chiche; Jean-Paul Mira; Alain Cariou

Objectives:Although sudden cardiac death has been broadly studied, little is known on cerebrovascular events revealed by out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. We aimed to describe clinical features and prognosis of these patients and identify characteristics that could suggest a cerebrovascular etiology of the out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Design:Retrospective review (1999–2012) of databases of three regional referral ICU centers for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Setting:Patients admitted to ICU for management of successfully resuscitated out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Patients:Patients were included when subarachnoid hemorrhage, intracranial hemorrhage, ischemic stroke, sub/epidural hematoma, or cerebral thrombophlebitis was identified as the primary cause of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Traumatic or infectious causes were excluded. Patients were compared with a group of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest of nonneurological origin. Interventions:All medical records of the three prospective ICU databases, registered according to the Utstein style, were reviewed. Measurements and Main Results:Among 3,710 patients admitted for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, 86 were included (mainly subarachnoid hemorrhage, n = 73). Prodromes were mostly neurological but falsely evoked a cardiac origin in six patients. Electrocardiogram displayed abnormalities in 64% of patients, with 23% of pseudoischemic pattern (ST-segment elevation or left bundle branch block). Mortality rate was 100%, with brain death as the leading cause. In comparison with the nonneurological out-of-hospital cardiac arrest group, female gender, onset of neurological prodromes, lack of other prodromes, initial nonshockable rhythm, and unspecific electrocardiogram repolarization abnormalities were independent predictive factors of a primary cerebrovascular etiology. When present, the combination of these elements displayed an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.86 (95% CI, 0.81–0.91). Conclusions:Presentation of cerebrovascular event complicated with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest may mimic coronary etiology, but several clinical elements may help to identify brain causes. Even if survival is null, the high proportion of brain deaths provides opportunity for organ donation.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2013

Clinical Features and Outcomes in Patients With Disseminated Toxoplasmosis Admitted to Intensive Care: A Multicenter Study

Matthieu Schmidt; Romain Sonneville; David Schnell; Naïke Bigé; Rebecca Hamidfar; Nicolas Mongardon; Vincent Castelain; Keyvan Razazi; Antoine Marty; François Vincent; Martin Dres; Stéphane Gaudry; Charles Edouard Luyt; Vincent Das; Jean-Baptiste Micol; Alexandre Demoule; Julien Mayaux

BACKGROUND Characteristics and outcomes of adult patients with disseminated toxoplasmosis admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) have rarely been described. METHODS We performed a retrospective study on consecutive adult patients with disseminated toxoplasmosis who were admitted from January 2002 through December 2012 to the ICUs of 14 university-affiliated hospitals in France. Disseminated toxoplasmosis was defined as microbiological or histological evidence of disease affecting >1 organ in immunosuppressed patients. Isolated cases of cerebral toxoplasmosis were excluded. Clinical data on admission and risk factors for 60-day mortality were collected. RESULTS Thirty-eight patients were identified during the study period. Twenty-two (58%) had received an allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (median, 61 [interquartile range {IQR}, 43-175] days before ICU admission), 4 (10%) were solid organ transplant recipients, and 10 (27%) were infected with human immunodeficiency virus (median CD4 cell count, 14 [IQR, 6-33] cells/µL). The main indications for ICU admission were acute respiratory failure (89%) and shock (53%). The 60-day mortality rate was 82%. Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (hazard ratio [HR] = 2.28; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.05-5.35; P = .04) and systolic cardiac dysfunction (HR = 3.54; 95% CI, 1.60-8.10; P < .01) within 48 hours of ICU admission were associated with mortality. CONCLUSIONS Severe disseminated toxoplasmosis leading to ICU admission has a poor prognosis. Recipients of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant appear to have the highest risk of mortality. We identified systolic cardiac dysfunction as a major determinant of outcome. Strategies aimed at preventing this fatal opportunistic infection may improve outcomes.


Critical Care Medicine | 2015

Hypothermic Total Liquid Ventilation Is Highly Protective Through Cerebral Hemodynamic Preservation and Sepsis-Like Mitigation After Asphyxial Cardiac Arrest.

Matthias Kohlhauer; Fanny Lidouren; Isabelle Remy-Jouet; Nicolas Mongardon; Clovis Adam; Patrick Bruneval; Hakim Hocini; Yves Levy; Fabiola Blengio; Pierre Carli; Benoit Vivien; Jean-Damien Ricard; Philippe Micheau; Hervé Walti; Mathieu Nadeau; Raymond Robert; Vincent Richard; Paul Mulder; David Maresca; Charlie Demene; Mathieu Pernot; Mickael Tanter; Bijan Ghaleh; Alain Berdeaux; Renaud Tissier

Objectives:Total liquid ventilation provides ultrafast and potently neuro- and cardioprotective cooling after shockable cardiac arrest and myocardial infarction in animals. Our goal was to decipher the effect of hypothermic total liquid ventilation on the systemic and cerebral response to asphyxial cardiac arrest using an original pressure- and volume-controlled ventilation strategy in rabbits. Design:Randomized animal study. Setting:Academic research laboratory. Subjects:New Zealand Rabbits. Interventions:Thirty-six rabbits were submitted to 13 minutes of asphyxia, leading to cardiac arrest. After resumption of spontaneous circulation, they underwent either normothermic life support (control group, n = 12) or hypothermia induced by either 30 minutes of total liquid ventilation (total liquid ventilation group, n = 12) or IV cold saline (conventional cooling group, n = 12). Measurements and Main Results:Ultrafast cooling with total liquid ventilation (32°C within 5 min in the esophagus) dramatically attenuated the post–cardiac arrest syndrome regarding survival, neurologic dysfunction, and histologic lesions (brain, heart, kidneys, liver, and lungs). Final survival rate achieved 58% versus 0% and 8% in total liquid ventilation, control, and conventional cooling groups (p < 0.05), respectively. This was accompanied by an early preservation of the blood-brain barrier integrity and cerebral hemodynamics as well as reduction in the immediate reactive oxygen species production in the brain, heart, and kidneys after cardiac arrest. Later on, total liquid ventilation also mitigated the systemic inflammatory response through alteration of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, interleukin-1&bgr;, and interleukin-8 transcripts levels compared with control. In the conventional cooling group, cooling was achieved more slowly (32°C within 90–120 min in the esophagus), providing none of the above-mentioned systemic or organ protection. Conclusions:Ultrafast cooling by total liquid ventilation limits the post–cardiac arrest syndrome after asphyxial cardiac arrest in rabbits. This protection involves an early limitation in reactive oxidative species production, blood-brain barrier disruption, and delayed preservation against the systemic inflammatory response.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2013

Diagnosis performance of high sensitivity troponin assay in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients

Guillaume Geri; Nicolas Mongardon; Florence Dumas; Camille Chenevier-Gobeaux; Olivier Varenne; Xavier Jouven; Benoit Vivien; Jean-Paul Mira; Jean-Philippe Empana; Christian Spaulding; Alain Cariou

PURPOSE Early identification of the cause of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) remains a challenge. Our aim was to determine whether high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (HsTnT) was useful to diagnose a recent coronary artery occlusion as the cause of OHCA. METHODS Retrospective study including OHCA patients evaluated by systematic coronary angiogram at hospital admission. HsTnT was assessed at ICU admission. Predictive factors of a recent coronary occlusion were identified by logistic regression. Net reclassification improvement (NRI) was calculated to estimate the potential enhancement of prediction with HsTnT. RESULTS During the 5 year study period, 272 patients (median age 60 y, 76.5% men) were included, and a culprit coronary occlusion was found in 133 (48.9%). The optimum HsTnT cut-off to predict a recent coronary occlusion was 575 ng/l (sensitivity 65.4%, specificity 65.5%). In multivariate analysis, current smoking (OR 3.2 95%, 95%CI 1.62-6.33), time from collapse to BLS<3 min (OR 2.11, 95%CI 1.10-4.05), initial shockable rhythm (OR 5.29, 95%CI 2.06-13.62), ST-segment elevation (OR 2.44, 95%CI 1.18-5.03), post-resuscitation shock onset (OR 2.03, 95%CI 1.01-4.07) and HsTnT≥575 ng/l (OR 2.22, 95%CI 1.16-4.27) were associated with the presence of a recent coronary occlusion. Nevertheless, adding HsTnT to established risk factors of recent coronary occlusion identified above provided a non-significant NRI of -0.43%. CONCLUSIONS Admission HsTnT is increased after OHCA and is an independent factor of a recent coronary occlusion. However, HsTnT does not seem to be a strong enough diagnostic tool to select candidates for emergent coronary angiogram in OHCA survivors.


Critical Care | 2013

Increased survival of cirrhotic patients with septic shock

Bertrand Sauneuf; Benoit Champigneulle; Alexis Soummer; Nicolas Mongardon; Julien Charpentier; Alain Cariou; Jean-Daniel Chiche; Vincent Mallet; Jean-Paul Mira; Frédéric Pène

IntroductionThe overall outcome of septic shock has been recently improved. We sought to determine whether this survival gain extends to the high-risk subgroup of patients with cirrhosis.MethodsCirrhotic patients with septic shock admitted to a medical intensive care unit (ICU) during two consecutive periods (1997-2004 and 2005-2010) were retrospectively studied.ResultsForty-seven and 42 cirrhotic patients presented with septic shock in 1997-2004 and 2005-2010, respectively. The recent period differed from the previous one by implementation of adjuvant treatments of septic shock including albumin infusion as fluid volume therapy, low-dose glucocorticoids, and intensive insulin therapy. ICU and hospital survival markedly improved over time (40% in 2005-2010 vs. 17% in 1997-2004, P = 0.02 and 29% in 2005-2010 vs. 6% in 1997-2004, P = 0.009, respectively). Furthermore, this survival gain in the latter period was sustained for 6 months (survival rate 24% in 2005-2010 vs. 6% in 1997-2004, P = 0.06). After adjustment with age, the liver disease stage (Child-Pugh score), and the critical illness severity score (SOFA score), ICU admission between 2005 and 2010 remained an independent favorable prognostic factor (odds ratio (OR) 0.09, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.02-0.4, P = 0.004). The stage of the underlying liver disease was also independently associated with hospital mortality (Child-Pugh score: OR 1.42 per point, 95% CI 1.06-1.9, P = 0.018).ConclusionsIn the light of advances in management of both cirrhosis and septic shock, survival of such patients substantially increased over recent years. The stage of the underlying liver disease and the related therapeutic options should be included in the decision-making process for ICU admission.

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Jean-Paul Mira

Paris Descartes University

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Frédéric Pène

Paris Descartes University

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Florence Dumas

Paris Descartes University

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