1. Impact of Urgent Chemotherapy in Critically Ill Patients
- Author
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Pedro Caruso, Maria Cristina Franca de Oliveira, Aldo Lourenço Abbade Dettino, Juliana Carvalho Ferreira, and Antonio Paulo Nassar Junior
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Illness ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Humans ,Hospital Mortality ,Propensity Score ,Intensive care medicine ,Critical Care Outcomes ,Survival analysis ,Retrospective Studies ,Chemotherapy ,Critically ill ,business.industry ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Middle Aged ,Life Support Care ,Intensive Care Units ,Treatment Outcome ,030228 respiratory system ,Case-Control Studies ,Hematologic Neoplasms ,Critical illness ,Female ,Complication ,business - Abstract
Objective: Compare the mortality between critically ill patients who received urgent chemotherapy for a cancer-related life-threatening complication with matched patients (controls) who did not received it. Design: Propensity score-matched retrospective study. Setting: Adult intensive care unit in an oncological hospital. Participants: All adults with solid tumor or hematological malignancies who received at least 1 day of urgent intravenous chemotherapy for a cancer-related life-threatening complication. Using the propensity score method adjusted for 10 variables, patients who received urgent chemotherapy were matched to patients who did not. Interventions: None. Main Outcomes Measures: Intensive care unit and hospital mortality. Results: Forty-seven patients (57% with solid tumors and 43% with hematological malignancies) who received urgent chemotherapy were matched to 94 controls. At intensive care unit admission, patients were similar except that those who received urgent chemotherapy were less likely to have received chemotherapy previously (36% vs 85%; P < .01). The intensive care unit (48.9% vs 23.4%; P < .01) and hospital (76.6% vs 46.8%; P < .01) mortality of the patients who received urgent chemotherapy was higher than the controls. The subgroup analysis showed that the higher mortality was limited to patients with solid tumor. Conclusion: The use of urgent chemotherapy is associated with an increase in the intensive care unit and hospital mortality of unselected critically ill patients with solid tumors but not in patients with hematological malignancies.
- Published
- 2017
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