by Clara Vigneron, Julien Charpentier, Sandrine Valade,
Jérôme Alexandre, Samy Chelabi, Lola-Jade Palmieri, Nathalie Franck, Valérie
Laurence, Jean-Paul Mira, Matthieu Jamme and Frédéric Pène
Annals of
Intensive Care volume 11,
Article number: 182 (2021) Published: 24
December 2021
Background
Major therapeutic advances including immunotherapy and
targeted therapies have been changing the face of oncology and resulted in
improved prognosis as well as in new toxic complications. The aim of this study
is to appraise the trends in intensive care unit (ICU) admissions and outcomes
of critically ill patients with solid malignancies. We performed a
retrospective single-centre study over a 12-year period (2007–2018) including
adult patients with solid malignancies requiring unplanned ICU admission. Admission
patterns were classified as: (i) specific if directly related to the underlying
cancer; (ii) non-specific; (iii) drug-related or procedural adverse events.
Results
1525 patients were analysed. Lung and gastro-intestinal
tract accounted for the two main tumour sites. The proportion of patients with
metastatic diseases increased from 48.6% in 2007–2008 to 60.2% in 2017–2018 (p = 0.004).
Critical conditions were increasingly related to drug- or procedure-related
adverse events, from 8.8% of ICU admissions in 2007–2008 to 16% in 2017–2018 (p = 0.01).
The crude severity of critical illness at ICU admission did not change over
time. The ICU survival rate was 77.4%, without any significant changes over the
study period. Among the 1279 patients with complete follow-up, the 1-year
survival rate was 33.2%. Independent determinants of ICU mortality were
metastatic disease, cancer in progression under treatment, admission for
specific complications and the extent of organ failures (invasive and
non-invasive ventilation, inotropes/vasopressors, renal replacement therapy and
SOFA score). One-year mortality in ICU-survivors was independently associated
with lung cancer, metastatic disease, cancer in progression under treatment,
admission for specific complications and decision to forgo life-sustaining
therapies.
Conclusion
Advances in the management and the prognosis of solid
malignancies substantially modified the ICU admission patterns of cancer
patients. Despite underlying advanced and often metastatic malignancies, encouraging
short-term and long-term outcomes should help changing the dismal perception of
critically ill cancer patients.
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