| Literature DB >> 30309220 |
Christopher Martin Sauer1,2, Jinghui Dong3, Leo Anthony Celi2,4, Daniele Ramazzotti5.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Cancer patients are at increased risk of treatment- or disease-related admission to the intensive care unit. Over the past decades, both critical care and cancer care have improved substantially. Due to increased cancer-specific survival, we hypothesized that the number of cancer patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) and survival have increased.Entities:
Keywords: Critical care; Hematology; Intensive care units; Neoplasms; Oncology; Survival; Trends
Year: 2018 PMID: 30309220 PMCID: PMC6639228 DOI: 10.4143/crt.2018.360
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res Treat ISSN: 1598-2998 Impact factor: 4.679
Overview of patient characteristics and outcomes
| Variable | Without cancer | Hematologic malignancy | Solid malignancy | Hematologic and solid cancer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 35,989 | 1,083 | 4,330 | 66 | |
| 63.7±17.9 | 65.1±16.3 | 66.3±13.6 | 71.4±13.3 | |
| Elective | 4,781 (13.3) | 82 (7.6) | 1,033 (23.9) | 15 (22.7) |
| Urgent | 702 (2.0) | 24 (2.2) | 70 (1.6) | 2 (3.0) |
| Emergency | 30,506 (84.8) | 977 (90.2) | 3,227 (74.5) | 49 (74.2) |
| 9,976 (27.7) | 508 (46.9) | 1,260 (29.1) | 23 (34.8) | |
| 1,803 (5.0) | 67 (6.2) | 313 (7.2) | 8 (12.1) | |
| 25,785 (71.6) | 837 (77.3) | 3,268 (75.5) | 53 (80.3) | |
| 4.6±6.1 | 5.4±7.2 | 4.1±5.2 | 3.9±3.2 | |
| 9.3±8.7 | 14.8±15.3 | 10.0±8.2 | 10.1±9.0 | |
| 18,124 (50.4) | 464 (42.8) | 1,888 (43.6) | 28 (42.4) | |
| 12,310 (34.2) | 365 (33.7) | 1,109 (25.6) | 15 (22.7) | |
| 8.7±11.1 | 17.4±11.7 | 19.1±12.9 | 25.2±12.4 | |
| 3.3±2.5 | 4.6±3.0 | 3.3±2.6 | 3.8±2.9 | |
| 42.0±19.4 | 50.3±22.2 | 44.4±20.2 | 48.7±21.3 | |
| 4,598 (12.8) | 300 (27.7) | 1,185 (27.4) | 18 (27.3) | |
| 8,284 (23.0) | 570 (52.6) | 2,514 (58.1) | 38 (57.6) |
Values are presented as mean±standard deviation or number (%). Patients with cancer had higher rates of DNR orders, sepsis, comorbidity scores, similar clinical severity scores, received less invasive treatment and had higher 28-day and 1-year mortality. Patients with solid malignancies were more likely to be elective admissions than patients without cancer.
DNR, do not resuscitate; ICU, intensive care unit; SOFA, Sepsis Related Organ Failure Assessment; APACHE-III, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation Score.
Fig. 1.Changes in overall and cancer-type specific admission to the intensive care unit between 2002 and 2011. Both the proportion and absolute number of cancer patients increased over time. While there are annual fluctuations, proportions by cancer type remain overall similar.
Fig. 2.Changes in unadjusted 28-day mortality (A) and unadjusted 1-year mortality (B) over the 10-year period. There are notable differences in mortality between the subgroups, with cancers of the oral cavity/lip/pharynx and other primary origin having the highest mortality rates. Genitourinary (GU) and breast/connective tissue cancers had the lowest mortality rates. Overall, most cancer types show a decrease in mortality rates over time. GI, gastrointestinal cancer; Oral cancer, cancer of the oral cavity/lip/pharynx.
Comparison of odds of dying by cancer type within 28 days and 1 year
| 28-Day mortality (95% CI) | 1-Year mortality (95% CI) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-cancer | Solid cancer | Hematologic cancers | Non-cancer | Solid cancer | Hematologic cancers | |
| Reference | 2.47 (2.30 to 2.66) | 2.29 (2.00 to 2.61) | Reference | 4.41 (4.14 to 4.70) | 3.07 (2.73 to 3.46) | |
| Reference | 2.38 (2.15 to 2.63) | 1.80 (1.51 to 2.14) | Reference | 4.02 (3.69 to 4.38) | 2.25 (1.93 to 2.62) | |
| –5.5 (–4.1 to –6.9)[ | 6.1 (–3.0 to –9.2)[ | –10.6 (–4.7 to –16.2)[ | –6.2 (–5.1 to –7.3)[ | –5.4 (–1.8 to –7.2)[ | –8.8 (–3.7 to –17.6)[ | |
| Connective tissue (n=214) | - | NA | - | - | –9.9 (+6.3 to –24.0) | - |
| Gastrointestinal (n=1,214) | - | –5.8 (0.0 to –17.6) | - | - | –9.6 (–4.4 to –14.6)[ | - |
| Genitourinary (n=590) | - | –9.6 (0.0 to –18.6) | - | - | –3.2 (+4.7 to –10.5) | - |
| Oral (n=77) | - | NA | - | - | NA | - |
| Respiratory and thoracic (n=971) | - | –8.1 (–1.9 to –14.0)[ | - | - | –2.5 (+4.2 to –8.7) | - |
| Other/unclassified solid (n=1,270) | - | –5.0 (+1.2 to –10.8) | - | - | –3.4 (+2.5 to –9.0) | - |
| Leukemia (n=443) | - | - | –13.0 (–3.4 to –21.8)[ | - | - | –9.3 (–0.4 to –17.6)[ |
| Lymphoma (n=527) | - | - | –9.2 (0.0 to –17.8) | - | - | –8.0 (–0.5 to –15.0)[ |
| Unclassified/other hematologic (n=173) | - | - | NA | - | - | –22.0 (–7.9 to –35.0)[ |
| - | –7.5 (–2.7 to –12.1)[ | - | - | –5.5 (–0.6 to –10.2)[ | - | |
NA, insufficient data for each stratum to adjust for all confounders.
p < 0.05.
Comparison of the odds of death of patients with solid/hematologic malignancies to patients with no cancer,
Adjusted annualized change in the odds of death compared to 2002 by cancer type and anatomic location,
Annual change in odds of death for patients with metastatic cancer (compared to 2002). Negative values indicate decreased mortality rates.