Association of Surge Conditions with Mortality Among Critically Ill Patients with COVID-19

Objective To determine whether surge conditions were associated with increased mortality. Design Multicenter cohort study. Setting U.S. ICUs participating in STOP-COVID. Patients Consecutive adults with COVID-19 admitted to participating ICUs between March 4 and July 1, 2020. Interventions None Meas...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of intensive care medicine 2022-04, Vol.37 (4), p.500-509
Hauptverfasser: Admon, Andrew J., Leaf, David E., Gershengorn, Hayley B., McCullough, Peter A., O’Gara, Brian P., Valencia, Juan D., Grandin, E. Wilson, Waikar, Sushrut S., Athavale, Ambarish M., Vohra, Ishaan, Green, Adam, Allusson, Valerie, Williams, Aquino, Hernán, Miguel A., Saha, Aparna, Bose, Sonali, Leven, Emily A., Wang, Jing G., Mosoyan, Gohar, Guirguis, John, Garibaldi, Brian T., Gautam, Samir C., Yap, Ernie, Bhattacharya, Jyotsna, Wagner, John, Sirganagari, Dheeraj Reddy, Shah, Jatan A., Kumar, Princy N., Kassaye, Seble G., Melamed, Michal L., Johns, Tanya S., Levy, Rebecca V., Fisher, Molly, Thakkar, Jyotsana, Athreya, Akshay, Schenck, Edward J., Alvarez-Mulett, Sergio L., Pan, Di, Lee, Stefi, Whalen, William, Charytan, David, Chaudhry, Sobaata, Srivastava, Anand, Leidner, Alexander S., Price-Haywood, Eboni G., Matute-Trochez, Luis A., Hasty, Anna E., Sise, Meghan E., Correa, Simon, Strohbehn, Ian A., Abu-Saif, Abeer, Rowan, Chris, Madhani-Lovely, Farah, Byun, John J., Vissing, Andrew, Hermes, Joy-Marie, Patrawalla, Amee, Finkel, Diana G., Paer, Jeffrey M., Sunderram, Jag, Ahmed, Ayesha, Garcia, Pablo, Boyle, Suzanne M., Woo, Sang Hoon, Sharshir, Moh’d A., Rusnak, Vadym V., Peters, Terri, Hughes, Kathy, Bansal, Anip, Rashidi, Arash, Hejal, Rana, Judd, Eric, Tolwani, Ashita, Schulze, Carl E., Kunczt, Alissa, Toth-Manikowski, Stephanie M., Joo, Min J., Lash, James P., Neyra, Javier A., Ahmad, Yahya, Dy, Rajany, Iardino, Alfredo, Anne Sosa, Marie, Azam, Tariq U., O” Hayer, Patrick, Padalia, Kishan J., Bitar, Abbas, Flythe, Jennifer E., Chang, Emily H., Leonberg-Yoo, Amanda K., Roche, Meaghan S., Verma, Siddharth, Nadamuni, Mridula V., Renaghan, Amanda D., Mariyam Joy, Christina, Kao, Patricia F., Schumaker, Greg L., Goyal, Nitender, Hsu, Caroline M., Tariq, Asma
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective To determine whether surge conditions were associated with increased mortality. Design Multicenter cohort study. Setting U.S. ICUs participating in STOP-COVID. Patients Consecutive adults with COVID-19 admitted to participating ICUs between March 4 and July 1, 2020. Interventions None Measurements and Main Results The main outcome was 28-day in-hospital mortality. To assess the association between admission to an ICU during a surge period and mortality, we used two different strategies: (1) an inverse probability weighted difference-in-differences model limited to appropriately matched surge and non-surge patients and (2) a meta-regression of 50 multivariable difference-in-differences models (each based on sets of randomly matched surge- and non-surge hospitals). In the first analysis, we considered a single surge period for the cohort (March 23 – May 6). In the second, each surge hospital had its own surge period (which was compared to the same time periods in matched non-surge hospitals). Our cohort consisted of 4342 ICU patients (average age 60.8 [sd 14.8], 63.5% men) in 53 U.S. hospitals. Of these, 13 hospitals encountered surge conditions. In analysis 1, the increase in mortality seen during surge was not statistically significant (odds ratio [95% CI]: 1.30 [0.47-3.58], p = .6). In analysis 2, surge was associated with an increased odds of death (odds ratio 1.39 [95% CI, 1.34-1.43], p 
ISSN:0885-0666
1525-1489
DOI:10.1177/08850666211067509