• Intensive care medicine · Mar 2014

    Multicenter Study

    One-year mortality and predictors of death among hospital survivors of acute respiratory distress syndrome.

    • Chen Yu Wang, Carolyn S Calfee, Devon W Paul, David R Janz, Addison K May, Hanjing Zhuo, Gordon R Bernard, Michael A Matthay, Lorraine B Ware, and Kirsten Neudoerffer Kangelaris.
    • Department of Internal Medicine, Taichung Veteran General Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan.
    • Intensive Care Med. 2014 Mar 1; 40 (3): 388-96.

    PurposeAdvances in supportive care and ventilator management for acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) have resulted in declines in short-term mortality, but risks of death after survival to hospital discharge have not been well described. Our objective was to quantify the difference between short-term and long-term mortality in ARDS and to identify risk factors for death and causes of death at 1 year among hospital survivors.MethodsThis multi-intensive care unit, prospective cohort included patients with ARDS enrolled between January 2006 and February 2010. We determined the clinical characteristics associated with in-hospital and 1-year mortality among hospital survivors and utilized death certificate data to identify causes of death.ResultsOf 646 patients hospitalized with ARDS, mortality at 1 year was substantially higher (41 %, 95% CI 37-45%) than in-hospital mortality (24%, 95% CI 21-27%), P < 0.0001. Among 493 patients who survived to hospital discharge, the 110 (22%) who died in the subsequent year were older (P < 0.001) and more likely to have been discharged to a nursing home, other hospital, or hospice compared to patients alive at 1 year (P < 0.001). Important predictors of death among hospital survivors were comorbidities present at the time of ARDS, and not living at home prior to admission. ARDS-related measures of severity of illness did not emerge as independent predictors of mortality in hospital survivors.ConclusionsDespite improvements in short-term ARDS outcomes, 1-year mortality is high, mostly because of the large burden of comorbidities, which are prevalent in patients with ARDS.

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