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Outcomes of cancer patients after unplanned admission to general intensive care units, Acta Oncologica, Informa Healthcare
Abstract
Background.
Acute admission to an intensive care unit (ICU) of cancer patients is
considered with increasing frequency due to a better life expectancy and
more aggressive therapies. The aim of this study was to determine the
characteristics and outcomes of cancer patients with unplanned
admissions to general ICUs, and to compare these with outcomes of
critically ill patients without cancer.
Material and methods. All
unplanned ICU admissions in the Netherlands collected in the National
Intensive Care Evaluation registry between January 2007 and January 2011
were analyzed.
Results and conclusion. Of the 140,154 patients
with unplanned ICU admission 10.9% had a malignancy. Medical cancer
patients were more severely ill on ICU admission in comparison with
medical non-cancer patients, as reflected by higher needs for mechanical
ventilation (50.8% vs. 46.4%, p < 0.001) and vasopressors within 24
hours after admission (41.5% vs. 33.0%, p < 0.001), higher Acute
Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) IV scores (88.1 vs.
67.5, p < 0.001) and a longer ICU stay (5.1 vs. 4.6 days, p
< 0.001). In contrast, surgical cancer patients only displayed a
modestly higher APACHE IV score on admission when compared with
non-cancer surgical patients, whereas the other afore mentioned
parameters were lower in the surgical cancer patients group. In-hospital
mortality was almost twice as high in medical cancer patients (40.6%)
as in medical patients without cancer (23.7%). In-hospital mortality of
surgical cancer patients (17.4%) was slightly higher than in patients
without cancer (14.6%). These data indicate that unplanned ICU admission
is associated with a high mortality in patients with cancer when
admitted for medical reasons.
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