Impact of
frailty on persistent critical illness: a population-based cohort study
Intensive Care Medicine: Published: 04
February 2022
Purpose
Acute illness severity predicts mortality in intensive care
unit (ICU) patients, however, its predictive value decreases over time in ICU.
Typically after 10 days, pre-ICU (antecedent) characteristics become more
predictive of mortality, defining the onset of persistent critical illness
(PerCI). How patient frailty affects development and death from PerCI is
unknown.
Methods
We conducted a secondary analysis of data from a prospective
binational cohort study including 269,785 critically ill adults from 168 ICUs
in Australia and New Zealand, investigating whether frailty measured with the
Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS) changes the timing of onset and risk of developing
PerCI and of subsequent in-hospital mortality. We assessed associations between
frailty (CFS ≥ 5) and mortality prediction using logistic regression and area
under the receiver operating characteristics (AUROC) curves.
Results
2190 of 50,814 (4.3%) patients with frailty (CFS ≥ 5) versus
6624 of 218,971 (3%) patients without frailty (CFS ≤ 4) developed PerCI (P < 0.001).
Among patients with PerCI, 669 of 2190 (30.5%) with frailty and 1194 of 6624
without frailty (18%) died in hospital (P < 0.001). The time point defining
PerCI onset did not vary with frailty degree; however, with increasing length of
ICU stay, inclusion of frailty progressively improved mortality discrimination
(0.1% AUROC improvement on ICU day one versus 3.6% on ICU day 17).
Conclusion
Compared to patients without frailty, those with frailty
have a higher chance of developing and dying from PerCI. Moreover the
importance of frailty as a predictor of mortality increases with ICU length of
stay. Future work should explore incorporation of frailty in prognostic models,
particularly for long-staying patients.
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