Higher Early IV Fluid Rates Tied to More SIRS but Lower BUN Rise in Acute Pancreatitis: Findings From an International Cohort Presented at ACG 2025

Higher Early IV Fluid Rates Tied to More SIRS but Lower BUN Rise in Acute Pancreatitis: Findings From an International Cohort Presented at ACG 2025

An international prospective cohort found that higher early IV fluid rates were associated with lower odds of BUN rise but higher odds of new or persistent SIRS at 6 and 24 hours after presentation, highlighting confounding issues and the need to individualize resuscitation.
Innovative Extracorporeal Therapy Combining HLA-Depleted Liver Organoids and Granulocyte-Monocyte Apheresis for Reversal of Acute Liver Failure

Innovative Extracorporeal Therapy Combining HLA-Depleted Liver Organoids and Granulocyte-Monocyte Apheresis for Reversal of Acute Liver Failure

The UTOpiA system, integrating HLA-depleted iPSC-derived liver organoids with granulocyte-monocyte apheresis, significantly improves survival and liver regeneration in acute-on-chronic and acute liver failure rat models, representing a promising off-the-shelf extracorporeal liver support therapy.
Evaluating the Cost-Effectiveness of Early In-Bed Cycling Plus Routine Physiotherapy in Mechanically Ventilated ICU Patients: Insights from the CYCLE Trial

Evaluating the Cost-Effectiveness of Early In-Bed Cycling Plus Routine Physiotherapy in Mechanically Ventilated ICU Patients: Insights from the CYCLE Trial

This economic evaluation from the CYCLE randomized trial found no significant cost or quality-adjusted life-year benefit by adding early in-bed cycling to usual physiotherapy for ICU patients on mechanical ventilation, underscoring a need for further research to clarify its value.
Clinical Decision Tool Integrating Decision Tree, Point-of-Care CRP Testing, and Safety Netting to Optimize Antibiotic Use in Acutely Ill Children: Evidence from the ARON Pragmatic Trial and Contextual Literature

Clinical Decision Tool Integrating Decision Tree, Point-of-Care CRP Testing, and Safety Netting to Optimize Antibiotic Use in Acutely Ill Children: Evidence from the ARON Pragmatic Trial and Contextual Literature

The ARON trial demonstrated that a clinical decision tool combining decision tree, point-of-care CRP testing, and safety-netting advice safely reduces antibiotic prescribing in acutely ill children without delaying recovery or increasing healthcare utilization.