| Literature DB >> 27306751 |
Dominique J Pepper1, Junfeng Sun2, Judith Welsh3, Xizhong Cui2, Anthony F Suffredini2, Peter Q Eichacker2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: At least 25 % of adults admitted to intensive care units (ICU) in the United States have an overweight, obese or morbidly obese body mass index (BMI). The effect of BMI on adjusted mortality in adults requiring ICU treatment for sepsis is unclear. We performed a systematic review of adjusted all-cause mortality for underweight, overweight, obese and morbidly obese BMIs relative to normal BMI for adults admitted to the ICU with sepsis, severe sepsis, and septic shock.Entities:
Keywords: Body mass index; Meta-analysis; Mortality; Obesity; Overweight; Sepsis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27306751 PMCID: PMC4908772 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1360-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Study selection flow diagram. *Studies involving trauma, primary surgical conditions, or surgical interventions complicated by nosocomial infections, as well as studies of children, and those occurring outside the critical care unit were excluded
Study characteristics
| Author (Y) | Country | Study design | Study period (MM/YY) | Diagnostic criteria | Age, years | Male (%) | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studies of sepsis, severe sepsis and septic shocka | |||||||
| Sakr [ | 24 European countriesb | Prospective cohort, multicenter | 05/02–05/02 | Septic shock [ | NR | NR | Hospital mortality |
| Wurzinger [ | Austria | Retrospective cohort, single center | 01/03–12/08 | Septic shock [ | 69 (14) | 162 (54) | ICU mortality |
| Adamzik [ | Germany | Prospective cohort, single center | NR | Severe sepsis [ | 57 (16) | 90 (58) | 30-day mortality |
| Arabia [ | Canada, USA Saudi Arabia | Retrospective cohort, multicenter | /96–/08 | Septic shock [ | NR | 1658 (58) | Hospital mortality |
| Wacharasint [ | Australia, Canada, USA | Retrospective cohort, multicenter | 07/01–04/06 | Septic shock [ | NR | 449 (62) | 28-day mortality |
| Sakr [ | 84 countriesc | Retrospective worldwide audit | 05/12–05/12 | Sepsis [ | NR | NR | 60-day in-hospital mortality |
NR not reported
aDefinitions of sepsis, severe sepsis and septic shock in these studies included Bone et al. [25] and Vincent et al. [26]
bAustria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia and Montenegro, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and United Kingdom
cList of 84 countries detailed in the following link: http://links.lww.com/CCM/B435
Studies with multivariate analyses for mortality
| Baseline study characteristics | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author (Y) (Total patients) | BMI studied (kg/m2) | Non-survivor/total | BMI | Age | Gender | Comorbid illnesses | Severity of acute illness | Other |
| Studies of sepsis, severe sepsis, and septic shock | ||||||||
| Sakr [ | Underweight (<18.5) | NR/17c | NR | NR | NR | NR | SAPS II | NR |
| Normal (18.5–24.9) | NR/179c | |||||||
| Overweight (25–29.9) | NR/148c | |||||||
| Obese (30–39.9) | NR/76c | |||||||
| Very obese (>40) | NR/11c | |||||||
| Wurzinger [ | Underweight (<18.5) | 3/15 | Yesd | Yes | Yes | COPD, HTN, DM, CRI, HO, heart disease | SAPS IId | Admission year, origin of sepsis |
| Normal (18.5–24.9) | 28/125 | |||||||
| Overweight (25–29.9) | 15/95 | |||||||
| Obese (30–39.9) | 4/66 | |||||||
| Adamzik [ | Continuous BMIa | NR | Yes | Yes | Yes | Hemofiltration/dialysis | SAPS II, SOFA score | IL-6d, aquaporin 5 genotyped, CRP, serum aldosterone, plasma angiotensin II, procalcitonin |
| Arabi [ | Underweight (<18.5)b | 121/196 | Yes | Yes | Yes | ID, HF, COPD, DM, Elective surgery | APACHE II | Type and source of bacterial infection, type of sepsis interventions |
| Normal (18.5–24.9) | 580/1020 | |||||||
| Overweight (25–29.9)b | 444/816 | |||||||
| Obese (30–39.9) | 349/680 | |||||||
| Morbidly obese (>40) | 76/170 | |||||||
| Wacharasint [ | Continuous BMIa | NR | Yesd | NR | Yes | DM | APACHE IId | Lung infection, fungal infection |
| Sakr [ | Underweight (<18.5) | NR | Yes | Yes | Yes | Comorbiditiese | SAPS II, SOFA score | Type and source of admission, need for mechanical ventilation or renal replacement therapy at ICU admission, type of hospital, ICU specialty, total number of ICU patients in 2011, number of staffed ICU beds, gross national income of country |
| Normal (18.5–24.9) | NR | |||||||
| Overweight (25–29.9) | NR | |||||||
| Obese (30–39.9) | NR | |||||||
| Very obese (>40) | NR | |||||||
BMI body mass index, NR not reported, SAPS Simplified Acute Physiology Score, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, HTN arterial hypertension, DM diabetes mellitus, CRI chronic renal insufficiency, HO hematologic/oncologic disease, SOFA Sepsis-related Organ Failure Assessment score, IL-6 interleukin-6, CRP C-reactive protein, ID immunodeficiency, HF heart failure, cancer, heart disease, APACHE Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation, ICU intensive care unit
aContinuous BMI: regression model used with body mass index as a continuous variable
bAdjusted odds ratio for mortality not provided by study for this BMI category
cNumerator not reported
dIndependently associated with mortality in multivariate analysis
eComorbidities not listed in multivariate analysis
Characteristics of body mass index (BMI) assessment
| BMI measurement | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author (Y) | Study populations | Method | Timing | Number with BMI/total patients (%) |
| Studies of severe sepsis, and septic shock | ||||
| Sakr [ | 431 patients with septic shock from 2878 patients with BMIs recorded in a survey of 3147 critically ill patients from 198 European countries. The total number of patients with septic shock out of all 3147 patients was not reported | Based either on recorded weight and height or on provider’s clinical estimate | At ICU admission | 2878/3147 (91 %) |
| Wurzinger [ | 301 (88 %) patients with BMIs recorded from 343 patients with septic shock admitted to a single ICU in Austria. A total of 2700 ICU admissions were screened to obtain the 343 patients with septic shock | Based on recorded weight and height | At ICU admission | 301/343 (88 %) |
| Adamzik [ | 125 (81 %) patients with BMIs recorded from 154 patients with severe sepsis admitted to a single ICU in Germany. Total number of patients screened not reported | Not reported | Within 24 hrs of diagnosis | 125/154 (81 %) |
| Arabi [ | 2882 (33 %) patients with BMIs recorded from 8670 patients admitted with septic shock to 28 ICUs in Canada, Saudi Arabia, and the USA | Based on recorded weight and height | At ICU admission | 2882/8670 (33 %) |
| Wacharasint [ | 730 (94 %) patients with BMIs recorded from 778 patients with septic shock admitted to 27 ICUs in Australia, Canada and the USA. A total of 6229 patients were screened for the trial and 802 were randomized. Number of patients with septic shock not enrolled is not noted | Based on recorded weight and height | At study enrollment for septic shock | 730/778 (94 %) |
| Sakr [ | 2696 patients with sepsis from 8829 patients with BMIs recorded in a worldwide audit of 10,069 patients admitted to 730 ICUs in 84 countries. The total number of patients with sepsis out of all 10,069 patients was not reported. Sepsis was defined as infection with organ failure | Based either on recorded weight and height or on provider’s clinical estimate | Before onset of critical illness or at hospital admission | 8829/10,069 (88 %) |
BMI body mass index, ICU intensive care unit
Fig. 2This figure shows the adjusted effects of different BMI categories on the odds ratio of mortality reported in studies examining patients requiring intensive care unit admission for sepsis, severe sepsis, or septic shock. Effects for underweight (<18.5 kg/m2), overweight (25 to <30 kg/m2), obese (30 to <40 kg/m2), and morbidly obese (≥40 kg/m2) BMIs were calculated compared to patients with normal BMIs (18.5 to 25 kg/m2 or <25 kg/m2). See the results section and Table 2 for variables that each study employed to adjust the effects of BMI on mortality as well as the definitions used for sepsis, severe sepsis, and septic shock