Sex Differences in Treatment of Adult Intensive Care
Patients: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
by Modra, Lucy J.; Higgins, Alisa M.; Abeygunawardana,
Vihangi S.; Vithanage, Ruvini N.; Bailey, Michael J.; Bellomo, Rinaldo
Critical Care Medicine: June 2022 -
Volume 50 - Issue 6 - p 913-923
OBJECTIVES:
To evaluate and synthesize the available literature on sex differences
in the treatment of adult ICU patients.
DATA SOURCES:
MEDLINE and EMBASE.
STUDY SELECTION:
Two reviewers independently screened publications to
identify observational studies of adult ICU patients that explicitly examined
the association between sex and ICU treatment—specifically,
mechanical ventilation, renal replacement therapy, and length of stay.
DATA EXTRACTION:
We extracted data independently and in duplicate: mean age,
illness severity, use of mechanical ventilation and renal replacement therapy,
and length of stay in ICU and hospital. We assessed risk of bias using the
Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. We used a DerSimonian-Laird random-effects model to
calculate pooled odds ratios (ORs) and mean differences between women and men.
DATA SYNTHESIS:
We screened 4,098 publications, identifying 21 eligible
studies with 545,538 participants (42.7% women). The study populations ranged
from 246 to 261,255 participants (median 4,420). Most studies (76.2%) were at
high risk of bias in at least one domain, most commonly representativeness or
comparability. Women were less likely than men to receive invasive mechanical
ventilation (OR, 0.83; 95% CI, 0.77–0.89; I2 = 90.4%) or renal
replacement therapy (OR, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.70–0.90; I2 = 76.2%). ICU
length of stay was shorter in women than men (mean difference, –0.24 d; 95% CI,
–0.37 to –0.12; I2 = 89.9%). These findings persisted in meta-analysis
of data adjusted for illness severity and other confounders and also in
sensitivity analysis excluding studies at high risk of bias. There was no
significant sex difference in duration of mechanical ventilation or
hospital length of stay.
CONCLUSIONS:
Women were less likely than men to receive mechanical
ventilation or renal replacement therapy and had shorter ICU length of stay
than men. There is substantial heterogeneity and risk of bias in the
literature; however, these findings persisted in sensitivity analyses.
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