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One-year mortality, quality of life and predicted life-time cost-utility in critically ill patients with acute respiratory failure

INTRODUCTION: High daily intensive care unit (ICU) costs are associated with the use of mechanical ventilation (MV) to treat acute respiratory failure (ARF), and assessment of quality of life (QOL) after critical illness and cost-effectiveness analyses are warranted. METHODS: Nationwide, prospective...

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Autores principales: Linko, Rita, Suojaranta-Ylinen, Raili, Karlsson, Sari, Ruokonen, Esko, Varpula, Tero, Pettilä, Ville
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2887181/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20384998
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc8957
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author Linko, Rita
Suojaranta-Ylinen, Raili
Karlsson, Sari
Ruokonen, Esko
Varpula, Tero
Pettilä, Ville
author_facet Linko, Rita
Suojaranta-Ylinen, Raili
Karlsson, Sari
Ruokonen, Esko
Varpula, Tero
Pettilä, Ville
author_sort Linko, Rita
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: High daily intensive care unit (ICU) costs are associated with the use of mechanical ventilation (MV) to treat acute respiratory failure (ARF), and assessment of quality of life (QOL) after critical illness and cost-effectiveness analyses are warranted. METHODS: Nationwide, prospective multicentre observational study in 25 Finnish ICUs. During an eight-week study period 958 consecutive adult ICU patients were treated with ventilatory support over 6 hours. Of those 958, 619 (64.6%) survived one year, of whom 288 (46.5%) answered the quality of life questionnaire (EQ-5D). We calculated EQ-5D index and predicted lifetime quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) gained using the age- and sex-matched life expectancy for survivors after one year. For expired patients the exact lifetime was used. We divided all hospital costs for all ARF patients by the number of hospital survivors, and by all predicted lifetime QALYs. We also adjusted for those who died before one year and for those with missing QOL to be able to estimate the total QALYs. RESULTS: One-year mortality was 35% (95% CI 32 to 38%). For the 288 respondents median [IQR] EQ-5D index after one year was lower than that of the age- and sex-matched general population 0.70 [0.45 to 0.89] vs. 0.84 [0.81 to 0.88]. For these 288, the mean (SD) predicted lifetime QALYs was 15.4 (13.3). After adjustment for missing QOL the mean predicted lifetime (SD) QALYs was 11.3 (13.0) for all the 958 ARF patients. The mean estimated costs were 20.739 € per hospital survivor, and mean predicted lifetime cost-utility for all ARF patients was 1391 € per QALY. CONCLUSIONS: Despite lower health-related QOL compared to reference values, our result suggests that cost per hospital survivor and lifetime cost-utility remain reasonable regardless of age, disease severity, and type or duration of ventilation support in patients with ARF.
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spelling pubmed-28871812010-06-18 One-year mortality, quality of life and predicted life-time cost-utility in critically ill patients with acute respiratory failure Linko, Rita Suojaranta-Ylinen, Raili Karlsson, Sari Ruokonen, Esko Varpula, Tero Pettilä, Ville Crit Care Research INTRODUCTION: High daily intensive care unit (ICU) costs are associated with the use of mechanical ventilation (MV) to treat acute respiratory failure (ARF), and assessment of quality of life (QOL) after critical illness and cost-effectiveness analyses are warranted. METHODS: Nationwide, prospective multicentre observational study in 25 Finnish ICUs. During an eight-week study period 958 consecutive adult ICU patients were treated with ventilatory support over 6 hours. Of those 958, 619 (64.6%) survived one year, of whom 288 (46.5%) answered the quality of life questionnaire (EQ-5D). We calculated EQ-5D index and predicted lifetime quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) gained using the age- and sex-matched life expectancy for survivors after one year. For expired patients the exact lifetime was used. We divided all hospital costs for all ARF patients by the number of hospital survivors, and by all predicted lifetime QALYs. We also adjusted for those who died before one year and for those with missing QOL to be able to estimate the total QALYs. RESULTS: One-year mortality was 35% (95% CI 32 to 38%). For the 288 respondents median [IQR] EQ-5D index after one year was lower than that of the age- and sex-matched general population 0.70 [0.45 to 0.89] vs. 0.84 [0.81 to 0.88]. For these 288, the mean (SD) predicted lifetime QALYs was 15.4 (13.3). After adjustment for missing QOL the mean predicted lifetime (SD) QALYs was 11.3 (13.0) for all the 958 ARF patients. The mean estimated costs were 20.739 € per hospital survivor, and mean predicted lifetime cost-utility for all ARF patients was 1391 € per QALY. CONCLUSIONS: Despite lower health-related QOL compared to reference values, our result suggests that cost per hospital survivor and lifetime cost-utility remain reasonable regardless of age, disease severity, and type or duration of ventilation support in patients with ARF. BioMed Central 2010 2010-04-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2887181/ /pubmed/20384998 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc8957 Text en Copyright ©2010 Linko et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Linko, Rita
Suojaranta-Ylinen, Raili
Karlsson, Sari
Ruokonen, Esko
Varpula, Tero
Pettilä, Ville
One-year mortality, quality of life and predicted life-time cost-utility in critically ill patients with acute respiratory failure
title One-year mortality, quality of life and predicted life-time cost-utility in critically ill patients with acute respiratory failure
title_full One-year mortality, quality of life and predicted life-time cost-utility in critically ill patients with acute respiratory failure
title_fullStr One-year mortality, quality of life and predicted life-time cost-utility in critically ill patients with acute respiratory failure
title_full_unstemmed One-year mortality, quality of life and predicted life-time cost-utility in critically ill patients with acute respiratory failure
title_short One-year mortality, quality of life and predicted life-time cost-utility in critically ill patients with acute respiratory failure
title_sort one-year mortality, quality of life and predicted life-time cost-utility in critically ill patients with acute respiratory failure
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2887181/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20384998
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc8957
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