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Clinical description and outcome of overall varicella-zoster virus-related organ dysfunctions admitted in intensive care units: the VAZOREA cohort study

Authors :
Jolan Malherbe
Pierre Godard
Jean-Claude Lacherade
Valentin Coirier
Laurent Argaud
Hervé Hyvernat
Francis Schneider
Julien Charpentier
Florent Wallet
Juliette Pocquet
Gaëtan Plantefeve
Jean-Pierre Quenot
Pierre Bay
Agathe Delbove
Hugues Georges
Tomas Urbina
David Schnell
Charlène Le Moal
Matthieu Stanowski
Corentin Muris
Maud Jonas
Bertrand Sauneuf
Olivier Lesieur
Amaury Lhermitte
Laure Calvet
Ines Gueguen
Damien du Cheyron
Source :
Annals of Intensive Care, Vol 14, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
SpringerOpen, 2024.

Abstract

Abstract Background Due to aging population and increasing part of immunocompromised patients, a raise in life-threatening organ damage related to VZV can be expected. Two retrospective studies were already conducted on VZV in ICU but focused on specific organ injury. Patients with high-risk of VZV disease still must be identified. The objective of this study was to report the clinical features and outcome of all life-threatening VZV manifestations requiring intensive care unit (ICU) admission. This retrospective cohort study was conducted in 26 French ICUs and included all adult patients with any life-threatening VZV-related event requiring ICU admission or occurring in ICU between 2010 and 2019. Results One-hundred nineteen patients were included with a median SOFA score of 6. One hundred eight patients (90.8%) were admitted in ICU for VZV disease, leaving 11 (9.2%) with VZV disease occurring in ICU. Sixty-one patients (51.3%) were immunocompromised. Encephalitis was the most prominent organ involvement (55.5%), followed by pneumonia (44.5%) and hepatitis (9.2%). Fifty-four patients (45.4%) received norepinephrine, 72 (60.5% of the total cohort) needed invasive mechanical ventilation, and 31 (26.3%) received renal-replacement therapy. In-hospital mortality was 36.1% and was significantly associated with three independent risk factors by multivariable logistic regression: immunosuppression, VZV disease occurring in ICU and alcohol abuse. Hierarchical clustering on principal components revealed five phenotypically distinct clusters of patients: VZV-related pneumonia, mild encephalitis, severe encephalitis in solid organ transplant recipients, encephalitis in other immunocompromised hosts and VZV disease occurring in ICU. In-hospital mortality was highly different across phenotypes, ranging from zero to 75% (p

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21105820
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Annals of Intensive Care
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0a90b33c49c44dc0b161359fce80be17
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13613-024-01270-w