Impact of recent intravenous chemotherapy on outcome in severe sepsis and septic shock patients with hematological malignancies

Autor: Eva Steel, Stijn Blot, Lucien Noens, Anna K. Van Tilborgh, Johan Decruyenaere, Dominique Vandijck, Joke Nollet, Dominique Benoit, Fritz Offner, Pieter Depuydt
Rok vydání: 2008
Předmět:
Zdroj: Intensive Care Medicine. 34:847-855
ISSN: 1432-1238
0342-4642
Popis: To compare the characteristics and outcome of patients with hematological malignancies referred to the ICU with severe sepsis and septic shock who had or had not received recent intravenous chemotherapy, defined as within 3 weeks prior to ICU admission.Retrospective observational cohort study on prospectively collected data in a medical ICU of a university hospital.186 ICU patients with hematological malignancies with severe sepsis or septic shock (2000-2006).There were 77 patients admitted with severe sepsis and 109 with septic shock; 91 (49%) had received recent intravenous chemotherapy. Patients with recent chemotherapy more often had a high-grade malignancy and were more often neutropenic, less often had pulmonary infiltrates, and less often required mechanical ventilation. ICU, 28-day, in-hospital, and 6-month mortality rates were 33% vs. 48.4%, 40.7% vs. 57.4%, 45.1% vs. 58.9%, and 50.5% vs. 63.2% in patients with and without recent chemotherapy, respectively. Logistic regression identified four variables independently associated with 28-day mortality: SOFA score at ICU admission, pulmonary site of infection, and fungal infection were associated with worse outcome whereas previous intravenous chemotherapy was protective at borderline significance. After adjustment with a propensity score for recent chemotherapy, chemotherapy was not associated with outcome.Patients referred to the ICU with severe sepsis and septic shock complicating active chemotherapeutic treatment have better prognosis than commonly perceived.
Databáze: OpenAIRE