Evolution of Mortality over Time in Patients Receiving Mechanical Ventilation
- Creators
- A. Esteban
- F. Frutos Vivar
- A. Muriel
- N. D. Ferguson
- O. Peñuelas
- V. Abraira
- K. Raymondos
- F. Rios
- N. Nin
- C. Apezteguía
- D. A. Violi
- A. W. Thille
- L. Brochard
- M. González
- A. J. Villagomez
- J. Hurtado
- A. R. Davies
- B. Du
- S. M. Maggiore
- PELOSI, PAOLO PASQUALINO
- L. Soto
- V. Tomicic
- G. D'Empaire
- D. Matamis
- F. Abroug
- R. P. Moreno
- M. A. Soares
- Y. Arabi
- F. Sandi
- M. Jibaja
- P. Amin
- Y. Koh
- M. A. Kuiper
- H. H. Bülow
- A. A. Zeggwagh
- A. Anzueto
- Others:
- A., Esteban
- F., Frutos Vivar
- A., Muriel
- N. D., Ferguson
- O., Peñuela
- V., Abraira
- K., Raymondo
- F., Rio
- N., Nin
- C., Apezteguía
- D. A., Violi
- A. W., Thille
- L., Brochard
- M., González
- A. J., Villagomez
- J., Hurtado
- A. R., Davie
- B., Du
- S. M., Maggiore
- Pelosi, PAOLO PASQUALINO
- L., Soto
- V., Tomicic
- G., D'Empaire
- D., Matami
- F., Abroug
- R. P., Moreno
- M. A., Soare
- Y., Arabi
- F., Sandi
- M., Jibaja
- P., Amin
- Y., Koh
- M. A., Kuiper
- H. H., Bülow
- A. A., Zeggwagh
- A., Anzueto
Description
Abstract Rationale: Baseline characteristics and management have changed over time in patients requiring mechanical ventilation; however, the impact of these changes on patient outcomes is unclear. Objectives: To estimate whether mortality in mechanically ventilated patients has changed over time. Methods: Prospective cohort studies conducted in 1998, 2004, and 2010, including patients receiving mechanical ventilation for more than 12 hours in a 1-month period, from 927 units in 40 countries. To examine effects over time on mortality in intensive care units, we performed generalized estimating equation models. Measurements and Main Results: We included 18,302 patients. The reasons for initiating mechanical ventilation varied significantly among cohorts. Ventilatory management changed over time (P < 0.001), with increased use of noninvasive positive-pressure ventilation (5% in 1998 to 14% in 2010), a decrease in tidal volume (mean 8.8 ml/kg actual body weight [SD = 2.1] in 1998 to 6.9 ml/kg [SD = 1.9] in 2010), and an increase in applied positive end-expiratory pressure (mean 4.2 cm H2O [SD = 3.8] in 1998 to 7.0 cm of H2O [SD = 3.0] in 2010). Crude mortality in the intensive care unit decreased in 2010 compared with 1998 (28 versus 31%; odds ratio, 0.87; 95% confidence interval, 0.80-0.94), despite a similar complication rate. Hospital mortality decreased similarly. After adjusting for baseline and management variables, this difference remained significant (odds ratio, 0.78; 95% confidence interval, 0.67-0.92). Conclusions: Patient characteristics and ventilation practices have changed over time, and outcomes of mechanically ventilated patients have improved. Clinical trials registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT01093482).
Additional details
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/11567/656368
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/656368
- Origin repository
- UNIGE