The impact of frailty and rapid response team activation on patients admitted to the intensive care unit: A case‐control matched, observational, single‐centre cohort study

Author:

Dugan Christopher1,Weightman Suzanne1,Palmer Vanessa1,Schulz Luis1,Aneman Anders123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Intensive Care Unit Liverpool Hospital, South Western Sydney Local Health District Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. Ingham Institute for Applied Medical Research Liverpool New South Wales Australia

3. Faculty of Health Sciences Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundFrailty is a multi‐dimensional syndrome associated with mortality and adverse outcomes in patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). Further investigation is warranted to explore the interplay among factors such as frailty, clinical deterioration triggering a medical emergency team (MET) review, and outcomes following admission to the ICU.MethodsSingle‐centre, retrospective observational case‐control study of adult patients (>18 years) admitted to a medical‐surgical ICU with (cases) or without (controls) a preceding MET review between 4 h and 14 days prior. Matching was performed for age, ICU admission diagnosis, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation III (APACHE III) score and the 8‐point Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS). Cox proportional hazard regression modelling was performed to determine associations with 30‐day mortality after admission to ICU.ResultsA total of 2314 matched admissions were analysed. Compared to non‐frail patients (CFS 1–4), mortality was higher in all frail patients (CFS 5–8), at 31% vs. 13%, and in frail patients admitted after MET review at 33%. After adjusting for age, APACHE, antecedent MET review and CFS in the Cox regression, mortality hazard ratio increased by 26% per CFS point and by 3% per APACHE III point, while a MET review was not an independent predictor. Limitations of medical treatment occurred in 30% of frail patients, either with or without a MET antecedent, and this was five times higher compared to non‐frail patients.ConclusionFrail patients admitted to ICU have a high short‐term mortality. An antecedent MET event was associated with increased mortality but did not independently predict short‐term survival when adjusting for confounding factors. The intrinsic significance of frailty should be primarily considered during MET review of frail patients. This study suggests that routine frailty assessment of hospitalised patients would be helpful to set goals of care when admission to ICU could be considered.

Publisher

Wiley

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