Re-evaluating albumin use in traumatic brain injury
Author
Date
2025-08-01Permanent link
http://hdl.handle.net/11351/13787DOI
10.1186/s40560-025-00813-y
ISSN
2052-0492
WOS
001542586100001
PMID
40750906
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) affects approximately 69 million people annually, with the majority of cases being mild-to-moderate in severity. However, in severe TBI, early management is critical and includes fluid resuscitation to control intracranial pressure (ICP) and optimize cerebral perfusion pressure. The SAFE-TBI study linked hypotonic 4% albumin to higher mortality versus saline (33.2% vs. 20.4%; RR 1.63; P = 0.003), likely due to elevated ICP, prompting guidelines favoring saline. However, these recommendations are based on low-quality evidence and overlook hyperoncotic albumin. Preclinical data confirm that hypotonicity—not albumin—drives ICP elevation. Emerging data suggest that hyperoncotic albumin (20–25%) may reduce ICP and improve outcomes. This letter highlights evidence gaps and advocates re-evaluating albumin use in TBI, especially hyperoncotic formulations.
Keywords
Albumin; Intracranial pressure; OutcomesBibliographic citation
Vincent JL, Ferrer R, Taccone FS, Wiedermann CJ, Reinstrup P. Re-evaluating albumin use in traumatic brain injury. J Intensive Care. 2025 Aug 1;13:43.
Audience
Professionals
This item appears in following collections
- HVH - Articles científics [4470]
- VHIR - Articles científics [1750]
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