1. Etiologies and outcomes of rheumatology patients with acute respiratory failure requiring intensive care: a single-center medical records review study of 259 patients.
- Author
-
Shi, Yan, Du, Bin, Zhao, Jiu-Liang, Qin, Han-Yu, Hu, Xiao-Yun, Jiang, Wei, Wang, Chun-Yao, Weng, Li, Wang, Qian, Zeng, Xiao-Feng, and Peng, Jin-Min
- Subjects
ADULT respiratory distress syndrome ,POLYMYOSITIS ,AIDS-related opportunistic infections ,ETIOLOGY of diseases ,MEDICAL care ,APACHE (Disease classification system) ,MEDICAL records - Abstract
Objective: The etiologies of acute respiratory failure in patients with systemic rheumatic diseases (SRDs) requiring intensive care remain unknown. This study was undertaken to investigate the etiologies and outcomes. Methods: A medical records review study was performed of 259 adult SRDs patients with respiratory failure admitted to medical ICU across a 5-year period. The etiologies were classified as infection, SRD exacerbation, and undetermined. The factors associated with ICU mortality were identified with multivariate logistic regression analysis. Results: The etiologies of respiratory failure included infection (n = 209, 80.7%), SRD exacerbation (n = 71, 27.4%), and undetermined (n = 21, 8.1%). The most common pathogen was Pneumocystis jirovecii (39.8%), followed by Aspergillus spp. (33.2%), and cytomegalovirus (23.2%). The ICU mortality rate was 59.8%. A high acute physiology and chronic health evaluation II score (OR 1.118, 95% CI 1.054 to 1.186, p < 0.001), a PaO
2 /FiO2 ratio < 100 mmHg (OR 3.918, 95% CI 2.199 to 6.892, p < 0.001), and a diagnosis of dermatomyositis/polymyositis (OR 4.898, 95% CI 1.949 to 12.309, p = 0.001), vasculitis (OR 3.007, 95% CI 1.237 to 7.309, p = 0.015), and Pneumocystis pneumonia (OR 2.345, 95% CI 1.168 to 4.705, p = 0.016) were associated with increased mortality. Conclusions: Opportunistic infections and SRD exacerbation were the most common etiologies of acute respiratory failure in patients with SRDs requiring ICU admission, with high ICU mortality. Development of a standard protocol for differential diagnosis in this population might help initiate definitive therapy and improve clinical outcome. Key Points • Infections, especially with opportunistic infections, were the leading cause of acute respiratory failure in critically ill rheumatology patients, with high mortality. • Severity of illness, certain types of rheumatic diseases, and opportunistic fungal infections were associated with increased mortality. • Using a comprehensive diagnostic workup might help to confirm the infective etiology and improve outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF