Interdepartmental Division of Critical Care, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Department of Medicine, University Health Network and Mount Sinai Hospital, Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Chest. 2019 Sep;156(3):466-476. doi: 10.1016/j.chest.2019.04.104. Epub 2019 May 15.
Moderate to severe depressive symptoms occur in up to one-third of patients at 1 year following ICU discharge, negatively affecting patient outcomes. This study evaluated patient and caregiver factors associated with the development of these symptoms.
This study used the Rehabilitation and Recovery in Patients after Critical Illness and Their Family Caregivers (RECOVER) Program (Phase 1) cohort of 391 patients from 10 medical/surgical university-affiliated ICUs across Canada. We determined the association between patient depressive symptoms (captured by using the Beck Depression Inventory II [BDI-II]), patient characteristics (age, sex, socioeconomic status, Charlson score, and ICU length of stay [LOS]), functional independence measure (FIM) motor subscale score, and caregiver characteristics (Caregiver Assistance Scale and Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale) by using linear mixed models at time points 3, 6, and 12 months.
BDI-II data were available for 246 patients. Median age at ICU admission was 56 years (interquartile range, 45-65 years), 143 (58%) were male, and median ICU LOS was 19 days (interquartile range, 13-32 days). During the 12-month follow-up, 67 of 246 (27.2%) patients had a BDI-II score ≥ 20, indicating moderate to severe depressive symptoms. Mixed models showed worse depressive symptoms in patients with lower FIM motor subscale scores (1.1 BDI-II points per 10 FIM points), lower income status (by 3.7 BDI-II points; P = .007), and incomplete secondary education (by 3.8 BDI-II points; P = .009); a curvilinear relation with age (P = .001) was also reported, with highest BDI-II at ages 45 to 50 years. No associations were found between patient BDI-II and comorbidities (P = .92), sex (P = .25), ICU LOS (P = .51), or caregiver variables (Caregiver Assistance Scale [P = .28] and Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale [P = .74]).
Increased functional dependence, lower income, and lower education are associated with increased severity of post-ICU depressive symptoms, whereas age has a curvilinear relation with symptom severity. Knowledge of risk factors may inform surveillance and targeted mental health follow-up. Early mobilization and rehabilitation aiming to improve function may serve to modify mood disorders.
在 ICU 出院后 1 年内,多达三分之一的患者会出现中重度抑郁症状,这会对患者的预后产生负面影响。本研究评估了与这些症状发生相关的患者和护理人员因素。
本研究使用了康复和重症监护后患者及其家庭护理人员(RECOVER)计划(第 1 阶段)的队列,该队列包括来自加拿大 10 家医科/外科大学附属医院 ICU 的 391 名患者。我们使用贝克抑郁量表第二版(BDI-II)来确定患者抑郁症状(3、6 和 12 个月时)与患者特征(年龄、性别、社会经济地位、Charlson 评分和 ICU 住院时间[LOS])、功能独立性测量(FIM)运动量表评分以及护理人员特征(护理人员协助量表和流行病学研究中心抑郁量表)之间的关联,使用线性混合模型进行分析。
BDI-II 数据可用于 246 名患者。ICU 入院时的中位年龄为 56 岁(四分位间距,45-65 岁),143 名(58%)为男性,ICU LOS 中位数为 19 天(四分位间距,13-32 天)。在 12 个月的随访期间,246 名患者中有 67 名(27.2%)的 BDI-II 评分≥20,表明存在中重度抑郁症状。混合模型显示,FIM 运动量表评分较低的患者(每 10 分 FIM 评分增加 1.1 分 BDI-II 评分)、收入较低的患者(BDI-II 评分降低 3.7 分;P=0.007)以及未完成中等教育的患者(BDI-II 评分降低 3.8 分;P=0.009)的抑郁症状更严重;还报告了与年龄的曲线关系(P=0.001),45 至 50 岁年龄组的 BDI-II 评分最高。患者 BDI-II 与合并症(P=0.92)、性别(P=0.25)、ICU LOS(P=0.51)或护理人员变量(护理人员协助量表 [P=0.28]和流行病学研究中心抑郁量表 [P=0.74])之间均无关联。
功能依赖性增加、收入降低和教育程度降低与 ICU 后抑郁症状严重程度增加相关,而年龄与症状严重程度呈曲线关系。对危险因素的了解可能有助于监测和针对性的心理健康随访。旨在改善功能的早期动员和康复可能有助于改善情绪障碍。