Section of Surgical Sciences, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN.
Division of Allergy, Pulmonary, and Critical Care Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN.
Ann Surg. 2020 Oct;272(4):596-602. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000004377.
We aimed to identify socioeconomic and clinical risk factors for post-intensive care unit (ICU)-related long-term cognitive impairment (LTCI).
After delirium during ICU stay, LTCI has been increasingly recognized, but without attention to socioeconomic factors.
We enrolled a prospective, multicenter cohort of ICU survivors with shock or respiratory failure from surgical and medical ICUs across 5 civilian and Veteran Affairs (VA) hospitals from 2010 to 2016. Our primary outcome was LTCI at 3- and 12 months post-hospital discharge defined by the Repeatable Battery for Assessment of Neuropsychological Symptoms (RBANS) global score. Covariates adjusted using multivariable linear regression included age, sex, race, AHRQ socioeconomic index, Charlson comorbidity, Framingham stroke risk, Sequential Organ Failure Assessment, duration of coma, delirium, hypoxemia, sepsis, education level, hospital type, insurance status, discharge disposition, and ICU drug exposures.
Of 1040 patients, 71% experienced delirium, and 47% and 41% of survivors had RBANS scores >1 standard deviation below normal at 3- and 12 months, respectively. Adjusted analysis indicated that delirium, non-White race, lower education, and civilian hospitals (as opposed to VA), were associated with at least a half standard deviation lower RBANS scores at 3- and 12 months (P ≤ 0.03). Sex, AHRQ socioeconomic index, insurance status, and discharge disposition were not associated with RBANS scores.
Socioeconomic and clinical risk factors, such as race, education, hospital type, and delirium duration, were linked to worse PICS ICU-related, LTCI. Further efforts may focus on improved identification of higher-risk groups to promote survivorship through emerging improvements in cognitive rehabilitation.
我们旨在确定与 ICU 后长期认知障碍(LTCI)相关的社会经济和临床危险因素。
在 ICU 住院期间发生谵妄后,LTCI 越来越受到关注,但并未关注社会经济因素。
我们纳入了一项前瞻性、多中心 ICU 幸存者队列研究,这些患者来自 5 家民用和退伍军人事务部(VA)医院的外科和内科 ICU,纳入时间为 2010 年至 2016 年。我们的主要结局是通过重复认知评估量表(RBANS)的全球评分,定义为住院后 3 个月和 12 个月时的 LTCI。使用多变量线性回归调整的协变量包括年龄、性别、种族、AHRQ 社会经济指数、Charlson 合并症、弗拉明汉卒中风险、序贯器官衰竭评估、昏迷持续时间、谵妄、低氧血症、脓毒症、教育水平、医院类型、保险状况、出院去向以及 ICU 药物暴露。
在 1040 名患者中,71%的患者发生了谵妄,幸存者中有 47%和 41%在 3 个月和 12 个月时的 RBANS 评分分别低于正常标准 1 个标准差以上。调整分析表明,谵妄、非白人种族、较低的教育水平和民用医院(而非 VA)与 3 个月和 12 个月时 RBANS 评分至少低半个标准差相关(P ≤ 0.03)。性别、AHRQ 社会经济指数、保险状况和出院去向与 RBANS 评分无关。
社会经济和临床危险因素,如种族、教育、医院类型和谵妄持续时间,与 ICU 后相关的 LTCI 较差有关。进一步的努力可能集中在通过认知康复方面的新进展,更好地识别更高风险的群体,以促进生存。