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Management and outcomes in critically ill nonagenarian versus octogenarian patients.


ABSTRACT:

Background

Intensive care unit (ICU) patients age 90 years or older represent a growing subgroup and place a huge financial burden on health care resources despite the benefit being unclear. This leads to ethical problems. The present investigation assessed the differences in outcome between nonagenarian and octogenarian ICU patients.

Methods

We included 7900 acutely admitted older critically ill patients from two large, multinational studies. The primary outcome was 30-day-mortality, and the secondary outcome was ICU-mortality. Baseline characteristics consisted of frailty assessed by the Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS), ICU-management, and outcomes were compared between octogenarian (80-89.9 years) and nonagenarian (> 90 years) patients. We used multilevel logistic regression to evaluate differences between octogenarians and nonagenarians.

Results

The nonagenarians were 10% of the entire cohort. They experienced a higher percentage of frailty (58% vs 42%; p < 0.001), but lower SOFA scores at admission (6 + 5 vs. 7 + 6; p < 0.001). ICU-management strategies were different. Octogenarians required higher rates of organ support and nonagenarians received higher rates of life-sustaining treatment limitations (40% vs. 33%; p < 0.001). ICU mortality was comparable (27% vs. 27%; p = 0.973) but a higher 30-day-mortality (45% vs. 40%; p = 0.029) was seen in the nonagenarians. After multivariable adjustment nonagenarians had no significantly increased risk for 30-day-mortality (aOR 1.25 (95% CI 0.90-1.74; p = 0.19)).

Conclusion

After adjustment for confounders, nonagenarians demonstrated no higher 30-day mortality than octogenarian patients. In this study, being age 90 years or more is no particular risk factor for an adverse outcome. This should be considered- together with illness severity and pre-existing functional capacity - to effectively guide triage decisions.

Trial registration

NCT03134807 and NCT03370692 .

SUBMITTER: Bruno RR 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8524896 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Management and outcomes in critically ill nonagenarian versus octogenarian patients.

Bruno Raphael Romano RR   Wernly Bernhard B   Kelm Malte M   Boumendil Ariane A   Morandi Alessandro A   Andersen Finn H FH   Artigas Antonio A   Finazzi Stefano S   Cecconi Maurizio M   Christensen Steffen S   Faraldi Loredana L   Lichtenauer Michael M   Muessig Johanna M JM   Marsh Brian B   Moreno Rui R   Oeyen Sandra S   Öhman Christina Agvald CA   Pinto Bernardo Bollen BB   Soliman Ivo W IW   Szczeklik Wojciech W   Valentin Andreas A   Watson Ximena X   Leaver Susannah S   Boulanger Carole C   Walther Sten S   Schefold Joerg C JC   Joannidis Michael M   Nalapko Yuriy Y   Elhadi Muhammed M   Fjølner Jesper J   Zafeiridis Tilemachos T   De Lange Dylan W DW   Guidet Bertrand B   Flaatten Hans H   Jung Christian C  

BMC geriatrics 20211019 1


<h4>Background</h4>Intensive care unit (ICU) patients age 90 years or older represent a growing subgroup and place a huge financial burden on health care resources despite the benefit being unclear. This leads to ethical problems. The present investigation assessed the differences in outcome between nonagenarian and octogenarian ICU patients.<h4>Methods</h4>We included 7900 acutely admitted older critically ill patients from two large, multinational studies. The primary outcome was 30-day-mortal  ...[more]

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