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A national shortage of norepinephrine in the United States was associated with higher rates of mortality among patients hospitalized with septic shock, investigators reported.

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A national shortage of norepinephrine in the United States was associated with higher rates of mortality among patients hospitalized with septic shock, investigators reported.

 

A national shortage of norepinephrine in the United States was associated with higher rates of mortality among patients hospitalized with septic shock, investigators reported.

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Key clinical point. The 2011 norepinephrine shortage was associated with mortality among patients hospitalized with septic shock.

Major finding: Rates of in-hospital mortality were 36% during quarters of normal norepinephrine use and 40% during quarters of decreased use (adjusted odds ratio, 1.2; P = .03).

Data source: A retrospective cohort study of 27,835 patients at 26 hospitals in the United States that were affected by the shortage.

Disclosures: The Herbert and Florence Irving Scholars Program at Columbia University provided funding. One coinvestigator disclosed grant funding from the National Institutes of Health and personal fees from UpToDate. The other investigators reported having no conflicts of interest.