by Heather K. O’Grady, Lara Edbrooke, Christopher Farley,
Sue Berney, Linda Denehy, Zudin Puthucheary and Michelle E. Kho
Critical Care volume 26,
Article number: 175 (2022) Published: 13
June 2022
Background
With ICU mortality rates decreasing, it is increasingly
important to identify interventions to minimize functional impairments and
improve outcomes for survivors. Simultaneously, we must identify robust
patient-centered functional outcomes for our trials. Our objective was to
investigate the clinimetric properties of a progression of three outcome
measures, from strength to function.
Methods
Adults (≥ 18 years) enrolled in five international ICU
rehabilitation studies. Participants required ICU admission were mechanically
ventilated and previously independent. Outcomes included two components of the
Physical Function in ICU Test-scored (PFIT-s): knee extensor strength and
assistance required to move from sit to stand (STS); the 30-s STS (30 s
STS) test was the third outcome. We analyzed survivors at ICU and hospital
discharge. We report participant demographics, baseline characteristics, and
outcome data using descriptive statistics. Floor effects represented ≥ 15% of
participants with minimum score and ceiling effects ≥ 15% with maximum score.
We calculated the overall group difference score (hospital discharge score
minus ICU discharge) for participants with paired assessments.
Results
Of 451 participants, most were male (n = 278, 61.6%) with a
median age between 60 and 66 years, a mean APACHE II score between 19 and
24, a median duration of mechanical ventilation between 4 and 8 days, ICU
length of stay (LOS) between 7 and 11 days, and hospital LOS between 22
and 31 days. For knee extension, we observed a ceiling effect in 48.5%
(160/330) of participants at ICU discharge and in 74.7% (115/154) at hospital
discharge; the median [1st, 3rd quartile] PFIT-s difference score (n = 139) was
0 [0,1] (p < 0.05). For STS assistance, we observed a ceiling effect in 45.9%
(150/327) at ICU discharge and in 77.5% (79/102) at hospital discharge; the
median PFIT-s difference score (n = 87) was 1 [0, 2] (p < 0.05). For 30 s
STS, we observed a floor effect in 15.0% (12/80) at ICU discharge but did not
observe a floor or ceiling effect at hospital discharge. The median 30 s
STS difference score (n = 54) was 3 [1, 6] (p < 0.05).
Conclusion
Among three progressive outcome measures evaluated in this
study, the 30 s STS test appears to have the most favorable clinimetric
properties to assess function at ICU and hospital discharge in moderate to
severely ill participants.
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