Dynamics of disease characteristics and clinical management of critically ill COVID-19 patients over the time course of the pandemic: an analysis of the prospective, international, multicentre RISC-19-ICU registry.

Wendel-Garcia, Pedro David; Moser, André; Jeitziner, Marie-Madlen; Aguirre-Bermeo, Hernán; Arias-Sanchez, Pedro; Apolo, Janina; Roche-Campo, Ferran; Franch-Llasat, Diego; Kleger, Gian-Reto; Schrag, Claudia; Pietsch, Urs; Filipovic, Miodrag; David, Sascha; Stahl, Klaus; Bouaoud, Souad; Ouyahia, Amel; Fodor, Patricia; Locher, Pascal; Siegemund, Martin; Zellweger, Nuria; ... (2022). Dynamics of disease characteristics and clinical management of critically ill COVID-19 patients over the time course of the pandemic: an analysis of the prospective, international, multicentre RISC-19-ICU registry. Critical care (London, England), 26(1), p. 199. BMC 10.1186/s13054-022-04065-2

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BACKGROUND

It remains elusive how the characteristics, the course of disease, the clinical management and the outcomes of critically ill COVID-19 patients admitted to intensive care units (ICU) worldwide have changed over the course of the pandemic.

METHODS

Prospective, observational registry constituted by 90 ICUs across 22 countries worldwide including patients with a laboratory-confirmed, critical presentation of COVID-19 requiring advanced organ support. Hierarchical, generalized linear mixed-effect models accounting for hospital and country variability were employed to analyse the continuous evolution of the studied variables over the pandemic.

RESULTS

Four thousand forty-one patients were included from March 2020 to September 2021. Over this period, the age of the admitted patients (62 [95% CI 60-63] years vs 64 [62-66] years, p < 0.001) and the severity of organ dysfunction at ICU admission decreased (Sequential Organ Failure Assessment 8.2 [7.6-9.0] vs 5.8 [5.3-6.4], p < 0.001) and increased, while more female patients (26 [23-29]% vs 41 [35-48]%, p < 0.001) were admitted. The time span between symptom onset and hospitalization as well as ICU admission became longer later in the pandemic (6.7 [6.2-7.2| days vs 9.7 [8.9-10.5] days, p < 0.001). The PaO2/FiO2 at admission was lower (132 [123-141] mmHg vs 101 [91-113] mmHg, p < 0.001) but showed faster improvements over the initial 5 days of ICU stay in late 2021 compared to early 2020 (34 [20-48] mmHg vs 70 [41-100] mmHg, p = 0.05). The number of patients treated with steroids and tocilizumab increased, while the use of therapeutic anticoagulation presented an inverse U-shaped behaviour over the course of the pandemic. The proportion of patients treated with high-flow oxygen (5 [4-7]% vs 20 [14-29], p < 0.001) and non-invasive mechanical ventilation (14 [11-18]% vs 24 [17-33]%, p < 0.001) throughout the pandemic increased concomitant to a decrease in invasive mechanical ventilation (82 [76-86]% vs 74 [64-82]%, p < 0.001). The ICU mortality (23 [19-26]% vs 17 [12-25]%, p < 0.001) and length of stay (14 [13-16] days vs 11 [10-13] days, p < 0.001) decreased over 19 months of the pandemic.

CONCLUSION

Characteristics and disease course of critically ill COVID-19 patients have continuously evolved, concomitant to the clinical management, throughout the pandemic leading to a younger, less severely ill ICU population with distinctly different clinical, pulmonary and inflammatory presentations than at the onset of the pandemic.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Intensive Care, Emergency Medicine and Anaesthesiology (DINA) > Clinic of Intensive Care
04 Faculty of Medicine > Pre-clinic Human Medicine > Department of Clinical Research (DCR)

UniBE Contributor:

Moser, André, Jeitziner, Marie-Madlen (B), Jakob, Stephan

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

1466-609X

Publisher:

BMC

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

06 Jul 2022 11:31

Last Modified:

20 Feb 2024 14:16

Publisher DOI:

10.1186/s13054-022-04065-2

PubMed ID:

35787726

Additional Information:

Wendel-Garcia and Moser shared first authorship; Que and Hilty shared senior authorship (equally contributing).

Uncontrolled Keywords:

ARDS COVID-19 Disease dynamics Intensive care unit Pandemic

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/171118

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/171118

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