Forster Alan J, Kyeremanteng Kwadwo, Hooper Jon, Shojania Kaveh G, van Walraven Carl
Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2008 Dec 17;8:259. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-8-259.
Adverse events (AEs) are patient injuries caused by medical care. Previous studies have reported increased mortality rates and prolonged hospital length of stay in patients having an AE. However, these studies have not adequately accounted for potential biases which might influence these associations. We performed this study to measure the independent influence of intensive care unit (ICU) based AEs on in-hospital mortality and hospital length of stay.
Prospective cohort study in an academic tertiary-care ICU. Patients were monitored daily for adverse clinical occurrences. Data about adverse clinical occurrences were reviewed by a multidisciplinary team who rated whether they were AEs and whether they were preventable. We determined the association of AEs in the ICU with time to death and time to hospital discharge using multivariable survival analysis models.
We evaluated 207 critically ill patients (81% required mechanical ventilation, median Glasgow Coma Scale = 8, median predicted mortality = 31%). Observed mortality rate and hospital length of stay were 25% (95% CI 19%-31%) and 15 days (IQR 8-34 days), respectively. ICU-based AEs and preventable AEs occurred in 40 patients (19%, 95% CI 15%-25%) and 21 patients (10%, 95% CI 7%-15%), respectively. ICU-based AEs and preventable AEs were not significantly associated with time to in-hospital death (HR = 0.93, 95% CI 0.44-1.98 and HR = 0.72 95% CI 0.25-2.04, respectively). ICU-based AEs and preventable AEs were independently associated with time to hospital discharge ((HR = 0.50, 95% CI 0.31-0.81 and HR = 0.46 95% CI 0.23-0.91, respectively)). ICU-based AEs were associated with an average increase in hospital length of stay of 31 days.
The impact of AEs on hospital length of stay was clinically relevant. Larger studies are needed to conclusively measure the association between preventable AEs and patient outcomes.
不良事件(AE)是由医疗护理导致的患者损伤。既往研究报告称,发生不良事件的患者死亡率增加且住院时间延长。然而,这些研究并未充分考虑可能影响这些关联的潜在偏倚。我们开展这项研究以衡量基于重症监护病房(ICU)的不良事件对住院死亡率和住院时间的独立影响。
在一所学术性三级医疗ICU进行前瞻性队列研究。对患者进行每日监测,观察不良临床事件。由多学科团队对不良临床事件的数据进行审查,评估这些事件是否为不良事件以及是否可预防。我们使用多变量生存分析模型确定ICU中的不良事件与死亡时间和出院时间之间的关联。
我们评估了207例危重症患者(81%需要机械通气,格拉斯哥昏迷量表中位数 = 8,预计死亡率中位数 = 31%)。观察到的死亡率和住院时间分别为25%(95%CI 19%-31%)和15天(四分位间距8-34天)。分别有40例患者(19%,95%CI 15%-25%)发生基于ICU的不良事件,21例患者(10%,95%CI 7%-15%)发生可预防的不良事件。基于ICU的不良事件和可预防的不良事件与住院死亡时间均无显著关联(风险比分别为0.93,95%CI为0.44-1.98;以及0.72,95%CI为0.25-2.04)。基于ICU的不良事件和可预防的不良事件均与出院时间独立相关(风险比分别为0.50,95%CI为0.31-0.81;以及0.46,95%CI为0.23-0.91)。基于ICU的不良事件与住院时间平均延长31天相关。
不良事件对住院时间的影响具有临床相关性。需要开展更大规模的研究以最终确定可预防的不良事件与患者预后之间的关联。