Sepsis, cardiovascular events and short-term mortality risk in critically ill patients.
10.47102/annals-acadmedsg.202220
- Author:
Sharlene HO
1
;
Hwee Pin PHUA
;
Wei Yen LIM
;
Niranjana MAHALINGAM
;
Guan Hao Chester TAN
;
Ser Hon PUAH
;
Jin Wen Sennen LEW
Author Information
1. Department of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Tan Tock Seng Hospital, Singapore.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Cardiovascular Diseases/epidemiology*;
Critical Illness/epidemiology*;
Hospital Mortality;
Humans;
Intensive Care Units;
Length of Stay;
Retrospective Studies;
Risk Factors;
Sepsis/epidemiology*
- From:Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore
2022;51(5):272-282
- CountrySingapore
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
INTRODUCTION:There is paucity of data on the occurrence of cardiovascular events (CVEs) in critically ill patients with sepsis. We aimed to describe the incidence, risk factors and impact on mortality of CVEs in these patients.
METHODS:This was a retrospective cohort study of critically ill patients admitted to the medical intensive care unit (ICU) between July 2015 and October 2016. The primary outcome was intra-hospital CVEs, while the secondary outcomes were in-hospital mortality, ICU and hospital length of stay.
RESULTS:Patients with sepsis (n=662) had significantly more CVEs compared to those without (52.9% versus 23.0%, P<0.001). Among sepsis patients, 350 (52.9%) had 1 or more CVEs: 59 (8.9%) acute coronary syndrome; 198 (29.9%) type 2 myocardial infarction; 124 (18.7%) incident atrial fibrillation; 76 (11.5%) new or worsening heart failure; 32 (4.8%) cerebrovascular accident; and 33 (5.0%) cardiovascular death. Factors associated with an increased risk of CVEs (adjusted relative risk [95% confidence interval]) included age (1.013 [1.007-1.019]); ethnicity-Malay (1.214 [1.005-1.465]) and Indian (1.240 [1.030-1.494]) when compared to Chinese; and comorbidity of ischaemic heart disease (1.317 [1.137-1.527]). There were 278 patients (79.4%) who developed CVEs within the first week of hospitalisation. Sepsis patients with CVEs had a longer median (interquartile range [IQR]) length of stay in the ICU (6 [3-12] vs 4 [2-9] days, P<0.001), and hospital (21 [10-42] vs 15 [7-30] days, P<0.001) compared to sepsis patients without CVEs. There was no difference in in-hospital mortality between the 2 groups (46.9% vs 45.8%, P=0.792).
CONCLUSION:CVEs complicate half of the critically ill patients with sepsis, with 79.4% of patients developing CVEs within the first week of hospitalisation, resulting in longer ICU and hospital length of stay.