Thombs Brett D, Singh Vijay A, Halonen Jill, Diallo Alfa, Milner Stephen M
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Ann Surg. 2007 Apr;245(4):629-34. doi: 10.1097/01.sla.0000250422.36168.67.
To determine whether and to what extent preexisting medical comorbidities influence mortality risk and length of hospitalization in patients with acute burn injury.
The effects on mortality and length of stay of a number of important medical comorbidities have not been examined in acute burn injury. Existing studies that have investigated the effects of medical comorbidities on outcomes in acute burn injury have produced inconsistent results, chiefly due to the use of relatively small samples from single burn centers.
Records of 31,338 adults who were admitted with acute burn injury to 70 burn centers from the American Burn Association National Burn Repository, were reviewed. A burn-specific list of medical comorbidities was derived from diagnoses included in the Charlson Index of Comorbidities and the Elixhauser method of comorbidity measurement. Logistic regression was used to assess the effects of preexisting medical conditions on mortality, controlling for demographic and burn injury characteristics. Ordinal least squares regression with a logarithmic transformation of the dependent variable was used to assess the relationship of comorbidities with length of stay.
In-hospital mortality was significantly predicted by HIV/AIDS (odds ratio [OR] = 10.2), renal disease (OR = 5.1), liver disease (OR = 4.8), metastatic cancer (OR = 4.6), pulmonary circulation disorders (OR = 2.9), congestive heart failure (OR = 2.4), obesity (OR = 2.1), non-metastatic malignancies (OR = 2.1), peripheral vascular disorders (OR = 1.8), alcohol abuse (OR = 1.8), neurological disorders (OR = 1.6), and cardiac arrhythmias (OR = 1.5). Increased length of hospital stay among survivors was significantly predicted by paralysis (90% increase), dementia (60%), peptic ulcer disease (53%), other neurological disorders (52%), HIV/AIDS (49%), renal disease (44%), a psychiatric diagnosis (42%), cerebrovascular disease (41%), cardiac arrhythmias (40%), peripheral vascular disorders (39%), alcohol abuse (36%), valvular disease (32%), liver disease (30%), diabetes (26%), congestive heart failure (23%), drug abuse (20%), and hypertension (17%).
A number of preexisting medical conditions influence outcomes in acute burn injury. Patients with preburn HIV/AIDS, metastatic cancer, liver disease, and renal disease have particularly poor prognoses.
确定既往存在的合并症是否以及在何种程度上影响急性烧伤患者的死亡风险和住院时间。
许多重要合并症对急性烧伤患者死亡率和住院时间的影响尚未得到研究。现有研究调查了合并症对急性烧伤患者预后的影响,但结果并不一致,主要原因是研究样本相对较小,且来自单一烧伤中心。
回顾了美国烧伤协会国家烧伤资料库中70家烧伤中心收治的31338例急性烧伤成年患者的记录。从Charlson合并症指数和Elixhauser合并症测量方法中包含的诊断中得出一份烧伤特异性合并症清单。采用逻辑回归分析评估既往合并症对死亡率的影响,并对人口统计学和烧伤损伤特征进行控制。使用对因变量进行对数转换的有序最小二乘回归分析评估合并症与住院时间的关系。
艾滋病(比值比[OR]=10.2)、肾病(OR=5.1)、肝病(OR=4.8)、转移性癌症(OR=4.6)、肺循环障碍(OR=2.9)、充血性心力衰竭(OR=2.4)、肥胖(OR=2.1)、非转移性恶性肿瘤(OR=2.1)、外周血管疾病(OR=1.8)、酒精滥用(OR=1.8)、神经系统疾病(OR=1.6)和心律失常(OR=1.5)显著预测住院死亡率。幸存者住院时间延长显著与瘫痪(增加90%)、痴呆(增加60%)、消化性溃疡疾病(增加53%)、其他神经系统疾病(增加52%)、艾滋病(增加49%)、肾病(增加44%)、精神疾病诊断(增加42%)、脑血管疾病(增加41%)、心律失常(增加40%)、外周血管疾病(增加39%)、酒精滥用(增加36%)、瓣膜病(增加32%)、肝病(增加30%)、糖尿病(增加26%)、充血性心力衰竭(增加23%)、药物滥用(增加20%)和高血压(增加17%)有关。
许多既往存在的合并症影响急性烧伤患者的预后。烧伤前患有艾滋病、转移性癌症、肝病和肾病的患者预后尤其差。