A prognostic model for one-year mortality in patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation*
- 1 July 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Critical Care Medicine
- Vol. 36 (7) , 2061-2069
- https://doi.org/10.1097/ccm.0b013e31817b8925
Abstract
A measure that identifies patients who are at high risk of mortality after prolonged ventilation will help physicians communicate prognoses to patients or surrogate decision makers. Our objective was to develop and validate a prognostic model for 1-yr mortality in patients ventilated for 21 days or more. The authors conducted a prospective cohort study. The study took place at a university-based tertiary care hospital. Three hundred consecutive medical, surgical, and trauma patients requiring mechanical ventilation for at least 21 days were prospectively enrolled. Predictive variables were measured on day 21 of ventilation for the first 200 patients and entered into logistic regression models with 1-yr and 3-mo mortality as outcomes. Final models were validated using data from 100 subsequent patients. One-year mortality was 51% in the development set and 58% in the validation set. Independent predictors of mortality included requirement for vasopressors, hemodialysis, platelet count ≤150 × 109/L, and age ≥50 yrs. Areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve for the development model and validation model were .82 (se .03) and .82 (se .05), respectively. The model had sensitivity of .42 (se .12) and specificity of .99 (se .01) for identifying patients who had ≥90% risk of death at 1 yr. Observed mortality was highly consistent with both 3- and 12-mo predicted mortality. These four predictive variables can be used in a simple prognostic score that clearly identifies low-risk patients (no risk factors, 15% mortality) and high-risk patients (three or four risk factors, 97% mortality). Simple clinical variables measured on day 21 of mechanical ventilation can identify patients at highest and lowest risk of death from prolonged ventilation.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- An economic evaluation of prolonged mechanical ventilation*Critical Care Medicine, 2007
- Prognostication during physician-family discussions about limiting life support in intensive care units*Critical Care Medicine, 2007
- Outcomes of prolonged mechanical ventilationCurrent Opinion in Critical Care, 2006
- What matters most in end-of-life care: perceptions of seriously ill patients and their family membersCMAJ : Canadian Medical Association Journal, 2006
- Risk Assessment for Inpatient Survival in the Long-term Acute Care Setting After Prolonged Critical IllnessChest, 2003
- Survival and quality of life: Short-term versus long-term ventilator patientsCritical Care Medicine, 2002
- Respiratory intermediate care units: a European surveyEuropean Respiratory Journal, 2002
- Use of the SOFA score to assess the incidence of organ dysfunction/failure in intensive care unitsCritical Care Medicine, 1998
- Patient Outcomes for The Chronically Critically IllNursing Research, 1995
- A new method of classifying prognostic comorbidity in longitudinal studies: Development and validationJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1987