Flaws Dylan, White Kyle, Edwards Felicity, Baker Stuart, Senthuran Siva, Ramanan Mahesh, Attokaran Antony G, Kumar Aashish, McCullough James, Shekar Kiran, McIlroy Philippa, Tabah Alexis, Luke Stephen, Garrett Peter, Laupland Kevin B
Department of Mental Health, Metro North Mental Health, Caboolture Hospital, Caboolture, QLD, Australia.
Critical Care Research Group, Adult Intensive Care Service, The Prince Charles Hospital, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
BMC Psychiatry. 2025 Feb 12;25(1):118. doi: 10.1186/s12888-025-06520-0.
Although comorbid medical diseases are important determinants of outcome among the critically ill, the role of psychiatric comorbidity is not well defined. The objective of this study was to determine the occurrence of psychiatric comorbidity and its effect on the outcome of patients admitted to adult intensive care units (ICU) in Queensland.
Admissions among adults to 12 ICUs in Queensland during 2015-2021 were included and clinical and outcome information was obtained through linkages between the ANZICS Adult Patient Database, the state-wide Queensland Hospital Admitted Patient Data Collection, and death registry.
A total of 89,123 admissions were included among 74,513 individuals. Overall, 7,178 (8.1%) admissions had psychiatric co-morbidity with 6,270 (7.0%) having one major psychiatric diagnosis and 908 (1%) having two or more. Individual diagnoses of mood, psychotic, anxiety, or affective disorders were present in 1,801 (2.0%), 874 (1.0%), 3,241 (3.6%) and 354 (0.4%) admissions respectively. Significant differences were observed among the main groups (mood, affective, anxiety, psychotic, or multiple disorders) and those without psychiatric comorbidity with respect to main diagnosis, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE II) score, sex, age, and medical comorbidity. Crude 30-day case-fatality rates were significantly lower (5.1%) compared to the general ICU population (10.1%) (p < 0.001). After controlling for confounding variables in the logistic regression model, patients with psychiatric comorbidity were at lower odds of death.
Psychiatric comorbidity is common among ICU presentations and is associated with a lower risk of death. This association is likely to be more complex than being a simple protective factor, and future research needs to further delineate how psychiatric comorbidity informs outcomes of specific ICU presentations.
尽管合并的内科疾病是危重症患者预后的重要决定因素,但精神疾病合并症的作用尚未明确界定。本研究的目的是确定昆士兰州成人重症监护病房(ICU)患者中精神疾病合并症的发生率及其对预后的影响。
纳入2015年至2021年期间昆士兰州12个ICU的成人住院患者,并通过澳大利亚和新西兰重症监护学会(ANZICS)成人患者数据库、全州范围的昆士兰州医院住院患者数据收集以及死亡登记之间的关联获取临床和预后信息。
共纳入74,513名个体的89,123次住院。总体而言,7,178例(8.1%)住院患者存在精神疾病合并症,其中6,270例(7.0%)有一项主要精神疾病诊断,908例(1%)有两项或更多项。分别有1,801例(2.0%)、874例(1.0%)、3,241例(3.6%)和354例(0.4%)住院患者被诊断为情绪、精神病性、焦虑或情感障碍。在主要诊断、急性生理与慢性健康状况评估(APACHE II)评分、性别、年龄和内科合并症方面,主要组(情绪、情感、焦虑、精神病性或多种障碍)与无精神疾病合并症的组之间存在显著差异。与普通ICU人群(10.1%)相比,合并精神疾病的患者30天粗病死率显著更低(5.1%)(p < 0.001)。在逻辑回归模型中控制混杂变量后,合并精神疾病的患者死亡几率更低。
精神疾病合并症在ICU患者中很常见,且与较低的死亡风险相关。这种关联可能比单纯的保护因素更为复杂,未来的研究需要进一步阐明精神疾病合并症如何影响特定ICU患者的预后。