AI Article Synopsis

  • ICU hospitalizations for elderly patients with acute respiratory infections (ARI) have risen, but the long-term impacts of these admissions are not well understood.
  • A study analyzed data on ICU survivors aged 80 and older, matching them with controls to assess differences in mortality, healthcare use, and frailty scores over two years post-discharge.
  • Findings revealed ICU survivors faced significantly higher mortality risk (10.1 times greater at 6 months and 3.6 times greater at 2 years), increased healthcare utilization, and a rise in frailty scores compared to controls, suggesting the need for improved post-ICU care strategies.

Article Abstract

Background: Intensive care unit (ICU) hospitalisations of elderly patients with acute respiratory infection have increased, yet the long-term effects of ICU admission among elderly individuals remain unknown. We examined differences over the 2 years after discharge in mortality, healthcare utilisation and frailty score between elderly survivors of ARI in the ICU and an elderly control population.

Methods: We used 2009-2017 data from 39 hospital discharge databases. Patients ≥ 80 years old discharged alive from ICU hospitalisation for acute respiratory infection were propensity score-matched with controls (cataract surgery) discharged from the hospital at the same time and adjusted for age, sex and comorbidities present before hospitalisation. We reported 2-year mortality and compared healthcare utilisation and frailty scores in the 2-year periods before and after ICU hospitalisation.

Results: One thousand two hundred and twenty elderly survivors of acute respiratory infection in the ICU were discharged, and 988 were successfully matched with controls. After discharge, patients had a 10.1-fold [95% CI, 6.1-17.3] higher risk of death at 6 months and 3.6-fold [95% CI, 2.9-4.6] higher risk of death at 2 years compared with controls. They also had a 2-fold increase in both healthcare utilisation and frailty score in the 2 years after hospital discharge, whereas healthcare utilisation and frailty scores among controls were stable before and after hospitalisation.

Conclusions: We observed a substantially increased rate of death in the years following ICU hospitalisation for elderly patients along with elevated healthcare resource use and accelerated age-associated decline as assessed by frailty score. These findings provide data for better informed goals-of-care discussions and may help target post-ICU discharge services.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7325055PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13054-020-03100-4DOI Listing

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