Key Performance Indicators in Intensive Care Medicine. A Retrospective Matched Cohort Study

Author:

Kastrup M1,von Dossow V1,Seeling M1,Ahlborn R2,Tamarkin A1,Conroy P1,Boemke W1,Wernecke K-D34,Spies C1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care, Campus Virchow-Klinikum and Campus Charité Mitte

2. IT Department, Charité University Medicine Berlin, Berlin, Germany

3. Institute for Biometrics and Clinical Epidemiology, Charité University Medicine Berlin, Berlin, Germany

4. Sostana GmbH, Berlin, Germany

Abstract

Expert panel consensus was used to develop evidence-based process indicators that were independent risk factors for the main clinical outcome parameters of length of stay in the intensive care unit (ICU) and mortality. In a retrospective, matched data analysis of patients from five ICUs at a tertiary university hospital, agreed process indicators (sedation monitoring, pain monitoring, mean arterial pressure [MAP] ≥ 60 mmHg, tidal volume [TV] ≤ 6 ml/kg body weight, peak inspiratory pressure [PIP] ≤ 35 cmH2O and blood glucose [BG] ≥ 80 and ≤ 130 mg/dl) were validated using a prospective dataset of 4445 consecutive patients. After matching for age, sex and ICU, 634 patients were analysed. Logistic regression of the 634 patients showed that monitoring analgesia and sedation, MAP ≥ 60 mmHg and BG ≥ 80 mg/dl were relevant for survival. Linear regression of the 634 patients showed that analgesia monitoring, PIP ≤ 35 cmH2O and TV ≤ 6 ml/kg were associated with reduced length of ICU stay. Linear regression on all 4445 patients showed analgesia, sedation monitoring, MAP ≥ 60 mmHg, BG ≥ 80 mg/dl and ≤ 130 mg/dl, PIP ≤ 35 cmH2O and TV ≤ 6 ml/kg were associated with reduced length of ICU stay, indicating that adherence to evidence-based key process indicators may reduce mortality and length of ICU stay.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Biochemistry, medical,Cell Biology,Biochemistry,General Medicine

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