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Association of frailty with short-term outcomes, organ support and resource use in critically ill patients

Authors :
Carlos Eduardo F. Freitas
Theodore J. Iwashyna
Leandro Utino Taniguchi
Mariza F. A. Lima
Marcio Soares
Fernando G. Zampieri
Clayton Barbieri de Carvalho
Grazielle Viana Ramos
Roberto Germano Costa
Giulliana Martines Moralez
Aline Reis Silva
Bruno Franco Mazza
William N. Viana
Fernando A. Bozza
Thiago Lisboa
Thiago Domingos Corrêa
Marcus A Ferez
Carlos Eduardo Nassif Moreira
Jorge I. F. Salluh
Marcelo de Oliveira Maia
Elizabeth M. Viglianti
Source :
Repositório Institucional do Centro Universitário La Salle, Universidade La Salle (UNILASALLE), instacron:UNILASALLE
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Springer, 2018.

Abstract

Frail patients are known to experience poor outcomes. Nevertheless, we know less about how frailty manifests itself in patients’ physiology during critical illness and how it affects resource use in intensive care units (ICU). We aimed to assess the association of frailty with short-term outcomes and organ support used by critically ill patients. Retrospective analysis of prospective collected data from 93 ICUs in Brazil from 2014 to 2015. We assessed frailty using the modified frailty index (MFI). The primary outcome was in-hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes were discharge home without need for nursing care, ICU and hospital length of stay (LOS), and utilization of ICU organ support and transfusion. We used mixed logistic regression and competing risk models accounting for relevant confounders in outcome analyses. The analysis consisted of 129,680 eligible patients. There were 40,779 (31.4%) non-frail (MFI = 0), 64,407 (49.7%) pre-frail (MFI = 1–2) and 24,494 (18.9%) frail (MFI ≥ 3) patients. After adjusted analysis, frailty was associated with higher in-hospital mortality (OR 2.42, 95% CI 1.89–3.08), particularly in patients admitted with lower SOFA scores. Frail patients were less likely to be discharged home (OR 0.36, 95% CI 0.54–0.79) and had higher hospital and ICU LOS than non-frail patients. Use of all forms of organ support (mechanical ventilation, non-invasive ventilation, vasopressors, dialysis and transfusions) were more common in frail patients and increased as MFI increased. Frailty, as assessed by MFI, was associated with several patient-centered endpoints including not only survival, but also ICU LOS and organ support.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Repositório Institucional do Centro Universitário La Salle, Universidade La Salle (UNILASALLE), instacron:UNILASALLE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb86db68d091706d96ea971b7bff1be2