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. 2015 Feb;43(2):282-7.
doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000000710.

The epidemiology of chronic critical illness in the United States*

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The epidemiology of chronic critical illness in the United States*

Jeremy M Kahn et al. Crit Care Med. 2015 Feb.

Abstract

Objectives: The epidemiology of chronic critical illness is not well characterized. We sought to determine the prevalence, outcomes, and associated costs of chronic critical illness in the United States.

Design: Population-based cohort study using data from the United States Healthcare Costs and Utilization Project from 2004 to 2009.

Setting: Acute care hospitals in Massachusetts, North Carolina, Nebraska, New York, and Washington.

Patients: Adult and pediatric patients meeting a consensus-derived definition for chronic critical illness, which included one of six eligible clinical conditions (prolonged acute mechanical ventilation, tracheotomy, stroke, traumatic brain injury, sepsis, or severe wounds) plus at least 8 days in an ICU.

Interventions: None.

Measurements and main results: Out of 3,235,741 admissions to an ICU during the study period, 246,151 (7.6%) met the consensus definition for chronic critical illness. The most common eligibility conditions were prolonged acute mechanical ventilation (72.0% of eligible admissions) and sepsis (63.7% of eligible admissions). Among patients meeting chronic critical illness criteria through sepsis, the infections were community acquired in 48.5% and hospital acquired in 51.5%. In-hospital mortality was 30.9% with little change over the study period. The overall population-based prevalence was 34.4 per 100,000. The prevalence varied substantially with age, peaking at 82.1 per 100,000 individuals 75-79 years old but then declining coincident with a rise in mortality before day 8 in otherwise eligible patients. Extrapolating to the entire United States, for 2009, we estimated a total of 380,001 cases; 107,880 in-hospital deaths and $26 billion in hospital-related costs.

Conclusions: Using a consensus-based definition, the prevalence, hospital mortality, and costs of chronic critical illness are substantial. Chronic critical illness is particularly common in the elderly although in very old patients the prevalence declines, in part because of an increase in early mortality among potentially eligible patients.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Distribution of community-acquired versus hospital-acquired sepsis, both overall and by hospital size. Data limited to states and years with present-on-admission codes (n=63,262). P<0.05 for the comparison across hospital types.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Age-specific population-based incidence of chronic critical illness (dark line) and chronic critical illness eligible conditions but with death prior to 8 days (dashed line). Data are for the five state sample, all years. CCI = chronic critical illness

Comment in

References

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