Determinants of post-intensive care mortality in high-level treated critically ill patients

Intensive Care Med. 2003 Oct;29(10):1751-6. doi: 10.1007/s00134-003-1915-8. Epub 2003 Aug 16.

Abstract

Objective: To assess the predictive ability of preillness and illness variables, impact of care, and discharge variables on the post-intensive care mortality.

Setting and patients: 5,805 patients treated with high intensity of care in 89 ICUs in 12 European countries (EURICUS-I study) surviving ICU stay.

Methods: Case-mix was split in training sample (logistic regression model for post-ICU mortality: discrimination assessed by area under ROC curve) and in testing sample. Time to death was studied by Cox regression model validated with bootstrap sampling on the unsplit case-mix.

Results: There were 5,805 high-intensity patients discharged to ward and 423 who died in hospital. Significant odds ratios were observed for source of admission, medical/surgical unscheduled admission, each year age, each SAPSII point, each consecutive day in high-intensity treatment, and each NEMS point on the last ICU day. Time to death in ward was significantly shortened by different source of admission; age over 78 years, medical/unscheduled surgical admission; SAPSII score without age, comorbidity and type of admission over 16 points; more than 2 days in high-intensity treatment; all days spent in high treatment; respiratory, cardiovascular, and renal support at discharge; and last ICU day NEMS higher than 27 points

Conclusions: Worse outcome is associated with the physiological reserve before admission in the ICU, type of illness, intensity of care required, and the clinical stability and/or the grade of nursing dependence at discharge.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Critical Care*
  • Critical Illness / mortality*
  • Critical Illness / therapy*
  • Humans
  • Middle Aged
  • Proportional Hazards Models