| Literature DB >> 30478708 |
Bertrand Guidet1,2,3, Helene Vallet4,5, Jacques Boddaert6,5, Dylan W de Lange7, Alessandro Morandi8,9, Guillaume Leblanc10,11, Antonio Artigas12, Hans Flaatten13,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is currently no international recommendation for the admission or treatment of the critically ill older patients over 80 years of age in the intensive care unit (ICU), and there is no valid prognostic severity score that includes specific geriatric assessments. MAIN BODY: In this review, we report recent literature focusing on older critically ill patients in order to help physicians in the multiple-step decision-making process. It is unclear under what conditions older patients may benefit from ICU admission. Consequently, there is a wide variation in triage practices, treatment intensity levels, end-of-life practices, discharge practices and frequency of geriatrician's involvement among institutions and clinicians. In this review, we discuss important steps in caring for critically ill older patients, from the triage to long-term outcome, with a focus on specific conditions in the very old patients.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30478708 PMCID: PMC6261095 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-018-0458-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Fig. 1Algorithm for critically ill patients over 80y
Fig. 2Impact of acute stress on fit or frail elderly. Physiological aging, comorbidities and functional dependency are the main components of frailty syndrome, leading to decrease in reserve capacities. At baseline, impact of frailty on survival is slight but its weight dramatically grows in case of acute stress (all medical events leading to ICU admission) and increase the risk of death comparatively to the fit elderly
Summary of main scales used in geriatric evaluation
|
| |
| Charlson comorbidity index [ | Age (years old) |
| 50–59 (1 point) | |
| 60–69 (2 points) | |
| 70–79 (3 points) | |
| ≥ 80 (4 points) | |
| Diabetes | |
| Uncomplicated (1 point) | |
| End-organ damage (2 points) | |
| Liver disease | |
| Mild (1 point) | |
| Moderate to severe (3 points) | |
| Malignancy | |
| Any leukemia, lymphoma or localized solid tumor (2 points) | |
| Metastatic solid tumor (6 points) | |
| AIDS (6 points) | |
| Moderate-to-severe renal disease (2 points) | |
| Congestive heart failure (1 point) | |
| Myocardial infarction (1 point) | |
| Chronic pulmonary disease (1 point) | |
| Peripheral vascular disease (1 point) | |
| Cerebrovascular disease (1 point) | |
| Dementia (1 point) | |
| Hemiplegia (2 points) | |
| Connective tissue disease (1 point) | |
| Peptic ulcer disease (1 point) | |
|
| |
| ADL scale [ | Bathing (independent: 1 point; partially dependent: 0,5 point; totally dependent: 0 point) |
| Dressing (independent: 1 point; partially dependent: 0,5 point; totally dependent: 0 point) | |
| Toileting (independent: 1 point; partially dependent: 0,5 point; totally dependent: 0 point) | |
| Transfer (independent: 1 point; partially dependent: 0,5 point; totally dependent: 0 point) | |
| Continence (independent: 1 point; partially dependent: 0,5 point; totally dependent: 0 point) | |
| Feeding (independent: 1 point; partially dependent: 0,5 point; totally dependent: 0 point) | |
| Scale from 0 (totally dependent) to 6 (independent) | |
| IADL scale [ | Ability to use telephone |
| Operates telephone on own initiative; looks up and dials numbers (1 point) | |
| Dials a few well-known numbers (1 point) | |
| Answers telephone, but does not dial (1 point) | |
| Does not use telephone at all (0 point) | |
| Shopping | |
| Takes care of all shopping needs independently (1 point) | |
| Shops independently for small purchases (0 point) | |
| Needs to be accompanied on any shopping trip (0 point) | |
| Completely unable to shop (0 point) | |
| Food preparation | |
| Plans, prepares and serves adequate meals independently (1 point) | |
| Prepares adequate meals if supplied with ingredients (0 point) | |
| Heats and serves prepared meals or prepares meals but does not maintain adequate diet (0 point) | |
| Needs to have meals prepared and served (0 point) | |
| Housekeeping | |
| Maintains house alone with occasion assistance (heavy work) (1 point) | |
| Performs light daily tasks such as dishwashing, bed making (1 point) | |
| Performs light daily tasks, but cannot maintain acceptable level of cleanliness (1 point) | |
| Needs help with all home maintenance tasks (1 point) | |
| Does not participate in any housekeeping tasks (0 point) | |
| Laundry | |
| Does personal laundry completely (1 point) | |
| Launders small items, rinses socks, stockings, etc. (1 point) | |
| All laundry must be done by others (0 point) | |
| Mode of transportation | |
| Travels independently on public transportation or drives own car (1 point) | |
| Arranges own travel via taxi, but does not otherwise use public transportation (1 point) | |
| Travels on public transportation when assisted or accompanied by another (1 point) | |
| Travel limited to taxi or automobile with assistance of another (0 point) | |
| Does not travel at all (0 point) | |
| Responsibility for own medications | |
| Is responsible for taking medication in correct dosages at correct time (1 point) | |
| Takes responsibility if medication is prepared in advance in separate dosages (0 point) | |
| Is not capable of dispensing own medication (0 point) | |
| Ability to handle finances | |
| Manages financial matters independently (budgets, writes checks, pays rent and bills, goes to bank); collects and keeps track of income (1 point) | |
| Manages day-to-day purchases, but needs help with banking, major purchases, etc. (1 point) | |
| Incapable of handling money (0 point) | |
| Scale from 0 (low function/dependent) to 8 (high function/independent) | |
|
| |
| Rockwood Clinical Frailty Scale [ | 1. Very fit—People who are robust, active, energetic and motivated. These people commonly exercise regularly. They are among the fittest for their age |
| 2. Well—People who have no active disease symptoms but are less fit than category 1. Often, they exercise or are very active occasionally, e.g., seasonally | |
| 3. Managing well—People whose medical problems are well controlled, but are not regularly active beyond routine walking | |
| 4. Vulnerable—While not dependent on others for daily help, often symptoms limit activities. A common complaint is being “slowed up,” and/or being tired during the day | |
| 5. Mildly frail—These people often have more evident slowing and need help in high-order IADLs (finances, transportation, heavy housework, medications). Typically, mild frailty progressively impairs shopping and walking outside alone, meal preparation and housework | |
| 6. Moderately frail—People need help with all outside activities and with keeping house. Inside, they often have problems with stairs and need help with bathing and might need minimal assistance (cuing, standby) with dressing | |
| 7. Severely frail—Completely dependent for personal care, from whatever cause (physical or cognitive). Even so, they seem stable and not at high risk of dying (within ~ 6 months) | |
| 8. Very severely frail—Completely dependent, approaching the end of life. Typically, they could not recover even from a minor illness | |
| 9. Terminally ill—Approaching the end of life. This category applies to people with a life expectancy | |
AIDS Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, ADL activity of daily living, IADL Instrumental Activities of Daily Living
Results from three studies of pre ICU triage in very old patients
| Patients triaged | Hospital mortality (%) | Long-term mortality (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Garrouste-Ortegas [ | At 1 year | |
| Admission ( | 62.5 | 70.8 |
| Too sick ( | 70.8 | 87.3 |
| Too well ( | 17.6 | 47 |
| Boumendil [ | At 6 months | |
| Admission ( | 32.7 | 47.5 |
| Too sick ( | 58 | 81.1 |
| Too well (1339) | 10.1 | 33.1 |
| Andersen [ | At 1 year | |
| Admission ( | 44 | 60 |
| Too sick ( | 67.3 | 88.5 |
| Too well ( | 34.8 | 50 |
Fig. 3Mortality. a Represents mortality rates in critically ill elderly patients following admission to the ICU at ICU and hospital discharge, at 30-day and 3, 6, 12 and 24 months in single-center studies from 2000 to 2017. b Represents mortality rates in critically ill elderly patients following admission to the ICU at ICU and hospital discharge, at 30-day and 3, 6, 12 and 24 months in multicenter studies from 2012 to 2017
Long-term functional outcome
| References | Tool | Design | Age-group | Patient followed | Main results | Comparison with baseline data (ICU admission) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kass [ | ADL | Prospective and retrospective | > 80 years | 38/105 (36.1%) | Nonsignificant decline of ADL score at 1 year | Yes |
| Chelluri [ | ADL | Prospective | > 75 years, 65–74 years) | 96 | No difference between two age-groups at 1, 6, 12 months | Yes |
| Broslawski [ | ADL, IADL, GDS | Prospective | > 70 years | 27/45 (60%) | Changes at 6 months related to ICU LOS and severity but not to age | Yes |
| Montuclard [ | ADL | Retrospective | > 70 years with 30 days of MV | 30/75 (40%) | Decrease in all domains except feeding at 6 months | Retrospective estimation by the patient |
| Udekwu [ | ADL | Retrospective | > 70 years | 342/672 (50.8%) | At 21 months, significant decrease in ADL with more dependent patients | Yes |
| Garrouste-Orgeas [ | ADL | Prospective | ≥ 80 years | 9/48 (18%) | No change | Retrospective estimation by the patient |
| Kaarlola [ | EQ-5D SF-36 | Retrospective (in survivors) | 65–69 years | 114 | More than 50% assessed their overall health status as satisfactory. Largest % in those ≥ 80 | No |
| Tabah [ | ADL | Prospective | ≥ 80 years | 23/106 (21%) | No change | Prospective estimation by the patient or relatives |
| Boumendil [ | ADL | Prospective | ≥ 80 years | 162/329 | At 6 months | Prospective estimation by the patient or relatives |
| Andersen [ | EQ-5D | Retrospective | ≥ 80 | 58/395 | HRQOL comparable with a comparison group (1 year) | |
| Andersen 2017 [ | EQ-5D | Prospective | ≥ 80 | 62/250 | Lower HRQOL than a comparison group (1 year) | Compared with a age and gender reference population |
| Heyland [ | SF-36 (physical function) | Prospective | ≥ 80 | 505/610 | 50% dead and 26% achieved physical recovery at 12 months | PF compared with baseline values at admission |
| Level 2017 [ | ADL, Barthel index | Prospective | ≥ 75 | 65/188 | 83% of 1-year survivors lived in their own home | ADL compared with baseline at admission |
| Guidet [ | ADL | Prospective | ≥ 75 years | 1528/3036 | Selection criteria: preserved baseline ADL (median 6) | Prospective estimation by the patient or relatives |
Key messages and unresolved issues
|
| |
| Seek for advance directives— | |
| Every time it is possible, ask the patient about his/her wishes | |
| If the patient is unable to communicate, seek for relatives/family wishes | |
| Try to estimate the immediate and long-term risk of death considering | |
| Patient baseline characteristics: | |
| Age | |
| Functional status (Clinical Frailty Scale, frailty phenotype, Performance status) | |
| Comorbidities including cancer | |
| Nutritional status and protein–energy balance | |
| Cognitive and psychiatric disorders | |
| Type of admission: scheduled versus urgent | |
| Reason for admission | |
| Acute severity— | |
| Mobilize geriatric expertise if possible— | |
| Define a goal of care anticipating second evaluation after few ICU days— | |
| If the patient is denied ICU admission consider palliative care | |
|
| |
| Organ support guidelines might not be appropriate for old patients— | |
| Fluid loading | |
| Ventilator settings | |
| Weaning strategy | |
| Special attention to medication with high risk of | |
| Overdose | |
| Interaction | |
| Consider LST limitation in case of poor response to initial treatment— | |
| ICU discharge— | |
| Patients are seen by a geriatrician after ICU discharge | |
| They are discharged to specialized geriatric unit | |
| Discuss timing | |
|
| |
| | |
| Consider the burden for the house caregivers |