Upcoming and urgent challenges in critical care research based on COVID-19 pandemic experience

•COVID-19 pandemic challenged critical care research paving the way to redesign new research frameworks and strategies.•Worldwide availability of clinical and translational research networks are critical to develop treatments preventing or curing diseases during next pandemics.•Prediction at the ind...

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Veröffentlicht in:Anaesthesia critical care & pain medicine 2022-10, Vol.41 (5), p.101121-101121, Article 101121
Hauptverfasser: Verdonk, Franck, Feyaerts, Dorien, Badenes, Rafael, Bastarache, Julie A., Bouglé, Adrien, Ely, Wesley, Gaudilliere, Brice, Howard, Christopher, Kotfis, Katarzyna, Lautrette, Alexandre, Le Dorze, Matthieu, Mankidy, Babith Joseph, Matthay, Michael A., Morgan, Christopher K., Mazeraud, Aurélien, Patel, Brijesh V., Pattnaik, Rajyabardhan, Reuter, Jean, Schultz, Marcus J., Sharshar, Tarek, Shrestha, Gentle S., Verdonk, Charles, Ware, Lorraine B., Pirracchio, Romain, Jabaudon, Matthieu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•COVID-19 pandemic challenged critical care research paving the way to redesign new research frameworks and strategies.•Worldwide availability of clinical and translational research networks are critical to develop treatments preventing or curing diseases during next pandemics.•Prediction at the individual level and rapid clinical responses are key factors to reduce healthcare burden.•Researchers and physicians should always prioritise realistic and ethical goals for both clinical care and research. While the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic placed a heavy burden on healthcare systems worldwide, it also induced urgent mobilisation of research teams to develop treatments preventing or curing the disease and its consequences. It has, therefore, challenged critical care research to rapidly focus on specific fields while forcing critical care physicians to make difficult ethical decisions. This narrative review aims to summarise critical care research —from organisation to research fields— in this pandemic setting and to highlight opportunities to improve research efficiency in the future, based on what is learned from COVID-19. This pressure on research revealed, i.e., (i) the need to harmonise regulatory processes between countries, allowing simplified organisation of international research networks to improve their efficiency in answering large-scale questions; (ii) the importance of developing translational research from which therapeutic innovations can emerge; (iii) the need for improved triage and predictive scores to rationalise admission to the intensive care unit. In this context, key areas for future critical care research and better pandemic preparedness are artificial intelligence applied to healthcare, characterisation of long-term symptoms, and ethical considerations. Such collaborative research efforts should involve groups from both high and low-to-middle income countries to propose worldwide solutions. As a conclusion, stress tests on healthcare organisations should be viewed as opportunities to design new research frameworks and strategies. Worldwide availability of research networks ready to operate is essential to be prepared for next pandemics. Importantly, researchers and physicians should prioritise realistic and ethical goals for both clinical care and research.
ISSN:2352-5568
2352-5568
DOI:10.1016/j.accpm.2022.101121