| Literature DB >> 26769605 |
Vincent Peigne1,2, Dominique Somme3,4, Emmanuel Guérot1,2, Emilie Lenain2,5, Gilles Chatellier2,5, Jean-Yves Fagon1,2, Olivier Saint-Jean2,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intensive care unit (ICU) patients are aging, and older age has been associated with higher mortality in ICU. As previous studies have reported that older age was also associated with less intensive treatment, we investigated the relationship between age, treatment intensity and mortality in medical ICU patients.Entities:
Keywords: Intensive care; Mechanical ventilation; Older patients; Renal failure; Shock; Treatment intensity
Year: 2016 PMID: 26769605 PMCID: PMC4713395 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-016-0107-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Treatment intensity indicator
| Supports | Groups of treatment intensity |
|---|---|
| Low-intense | |
| Dobutamine or dopamine ≤8 µg/kg/min | 0: no support |
| Noninvasive ventilation | 1: one low-intense support |
| Mechanical ventilation with FiO2 < 0.6 and PEEP < 6 cm H2O | 2: two low-intense supports or one high-intense support |
| 3: more intense support | |
| High-intense | |
| Dobutamine/dopamine >8 µg/kg/min, epinephrine or norepinephrine | |
| Mechanical ventilation with FiO2 ≥ 0.6 or PEEP ≥ 6 cm H2O | |
| Renal replacement therapy |
Fig. 1Flowchart
Fig. 2Hospital mortality and age
Treatment intensity in the different SAPS2 age subgroups
| <40 years [ | 40–59 years [ | 60–69 years [ | 70–74 years [ | 75–79 years [ | ≥80 years [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group 0 | 1381 (35.6 %) | 2298 (29.7 %) | 1170 (28.5 %) | 643 (28.8 %) | 732 (30.1 %) | 1073 (33.5 %) |
| Group 1 | 776 (20.0 %) | 1012 (13.1 %) | 445 (10.8 %) | 232 (10.4 %) | 230 (9.5 %) | 266 (8.3 %) |
| Group 2 | 520 (13.4 %) | 1066 (13.8 %) | 546 (13.3 %) | 315 (14.1 %) | 308 (12.7 %) | 457 (14.3 %) |
| Group 3 | 1200 (31.0 %) | 3351 (43.4 %) | 1951 (47.4 %) | 1040 (46.6 %) | 1159 (47.7 %) | 1407 (43.9 %) |
Comparison of the distributions by the Kruskal–Wallis test P < .001
Treatment intensity in the patients aged <80 and ≥80 years
| <80 years [ | ≥80 years [ | |
|---|---|---|
| Group 0 | 6624 (30.5 %) | 1073 (33.5 %) |
| Group 1 | 2695 (13.2 %) | 266 (8.3 %) |
| Group 2 | 2755 (13.5 %) | 457 (14.3 %) |
| Group 3 | 8701 (42.7 %) | 1407 (43.9 %) |
Hospital mortality according to the age of the patients in the four groups of treatment intensity
| All ages [ | <40 years [ | 40–59 years [ | 60–69 years [ | 70–74 years [ | 75–79 years [ | ≥80 years [ |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group 0 | 738 (10.1 %) | 35 (2.5 %) | 180 (7.8 %) | 105 (9.0 %) | 81 (12.6 %) | 108 (14.8 %) | 229 (21.3 %) | <.001 |
| Group 1 | 461 (15.6 %) | 30 (3.9 %) | 102 (10.1 %) | 83 (18.7 %) | 55 (23.7 %) | 70 (30.4 %) | 121 (45.5 %) | <.001 |
| Group 2 | 619 (19.3 %) | 41 (7.9 %) | 146 (13.7 %) | 100 (18.3 %) | 65 (20.6 %) | 83 (26.9 %) | 184 (40.3 %) | <.001 |
| Group 3 | 5128 (50.7 %) | 362 (30.2 %) | 1496 (44.6 %) | 1056 (54.1 %) | 574 (55.2 %) | 709 (61.2 %) | 931 (66.2 %) | <.001 |
Fig. 3Hospital mortality according to treatment intensity and age
Fig. 4Relationship between the standardized mortality ratio (SMR = observed mortality/expected mortality) and age in the four groups of treatment intensity. SMR increased with age in the lower intensity groups, reflecting either inadequate treatment intensity or a lower efficiency of treatment for the older patients. SMR was not related to age in the highest intensity group, reflecting a similar efficiency of such treatment whatever was the age of the patients