Outcomes of COVID-19-Related ARDS Patients Hospitalized in a Military Field Intensive Care Unit

Author:

Danguy des Déserts Marc12ORCID,Mathais Quentin3,Morvan Jean Baptiste3,Rager Gwendoline4,Escarment Jacques5,Pasquier Pierre56

Affiliation:

1. Intensive Care, Anesthesia, Emergency and Operating Theatre Department, Clermont Tonnerre Military Training Hospital, Brest 29240, France

2. EA3878 GETBO, University of Occidental Brittany, Brest 29238, France

3. Intensive Care, Anesthesia, Burns and Operating Theatre Department, Sainte Anne Military Training Hospital, Toulon 83000, France

4. Intensive Care, Anesthesia, Emergency and Operating Theatre Department, Robert Picqué Military Training Hospital, Villenave d’Ornon 33140, France

5. French Military Medical Academy, Paris 75005, France

6. Intensive Care, Anesthesia, Burns and Operating Theatre Department, Percy Military Training Hospital, Clamart 92140, France

Abstract

ABSTRACT Introduction Little evidence of outcome is available on critically ill Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients hospitalized in a field hospital. Our purpose was to report outcomes of critically ill COVID-19 patients after hospitalization in a field intensive care unit (ICU), established under military tents in a civil–military collaboration. Methods All patients with COVID-19-related acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) admitted to the Military Health Service Field Intensive Care Unit in Mulhouse (France) between March 24, 2020, and May 7, 2020, were included in the study. Medical history and clinical and laboratory data were collected prospectively. The institutional review board of the French Society Anesthesia and Intensive Care approved the study. Results Forty-seven patients were hospitalized (37 men, median age 62 [54-67] years, Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score 7 [6-10] points, and Simplified Acute Physiology Score II score 39 [28-50] points) during the 45-day deployment of the field ICU. Median length of stay was 11 [6-15] days and median length of ventilation was 13 [7.5-21] days. At the end of the deployment, 25 (53%) patients went back home, 17 (37%) were still hospitalized, and 4 (9%) died. At hospital discharge, 40 (85%) patients were alive. Conclusion In this study, a military field ICU joined a regional civil hospital to manage a large cluster of COVID-19-related ARDS patients in Mulhouse, France. This report illustrates how military teams can support civil authorities in the provision of advanced critical care. Outcomes of patient suggest that this field hospital deployment was an effective adaptation during pandemic conditions.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

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