Literature DB >> 23364436

Outcomes in critically ill cancer patients with septic shock of pulmonary origin.

Etienne de Montmollin1, Yacine Tandjaoui-Lambiotte, Mattieu Legrand, Jérôme Lambert, Djamel Mokart, Achille Kouatchet, Virginie Lemiale, Frédéric Pène, Fabrice Bruneel, François Vincent, Julien Mayaux, Sylvie Chevret, Elie Azoulay.   

Abstract

Increased therapeutic intensity has translated into better survival at a price of infectious and toxic life-threatening complications, chiefly affecting the lungs. Yet, no study specifically evaluated outcomes in cancer patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) for septic shock of pulmonary origin. This is a multicenter cohort study of cancer patients admitted to the ICU for septic shock and pneumonia between 1998 and 2008. Independent determinants of hospital mortality were assessed using a multivariate logistic regression model. Prognostic impact of persistence or acquisition of organ failures was evaluated by survival conditional probabilities. During the 10-year study period, 218 patients were included. Hematologic malignancy (mostly non-Hodgkin lymphoma and acute leukemia) affected 84%, and solid tumors (mostly lung cancer) affected 16% of patients. Chemotherapy was recently administered in 89% of patients, and 24.5% of patients were recipients of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (35 autologous, 18 allogeneic). At the time of ICU admission, 60% of patients were in partial or complete remission. All patients received vasopressors; invasive mechanical ventilation (MV) was needed in 78.4% and dialysis in 30% of patients. Intensive care unit and hospital mortality rates were 56.4% and 62.4%, respectively. Independent risk factors for hospital mortality were age older than 60 years, time between first symptoms and ICU admission, use of invasive MV, need for invasive MV after use of noninvasive ventilation, and coma. Analysis of survival probability showed that there was no temporal threshold after which persistence or gain of organ dysfunction indicated no hope for survival. Survival in cancer patients with septic shock from pulmonary origin is substantial, even when organ dysfunctions are not rapidly reversible. Delayed ICU management is an independent predictor of death. Studies assessing survival benefits from early ICU management are warranted.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23364436     DOI: 10.1097/SHK.0b013e3182866d32

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Shock        ISSN: 1073-2322            Impact factor:   3.454


  26 in total

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Authors:  Michael Darmon; François Vincent; Emmanuel Canet; Djamel Mokart; Frédéric Pène; Achille Kouatchet; Julien Mayaux; Martine Nyunga; Fabrice Bruneel; Antoine Rabbat; Christine Lebert; Pierre Perez; Anne Renault; Anne-Pascale Meert; Dominique Benoit; Rebecca Hamidfar; Mercé Jourdain; Benoit Schlemmer; Sylvie Chevret; Virginie Lemiale; Elie Azoulay
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Review 9.  Critically ill allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation patients in the intensive care unit: reappraisal of actual prognosis.

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10.  A 12-year study evaluating the outcomes and predictors of mortality in critically ill cancer patients admitted with septic shock.

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