Journal of Clinical Medicine (Mar 2023)

Age and Comorbidity Burden of Patients Critically Ill with COVID-19 Affect Both Access to and Outcome of Ventilation Therapy in Intensive Care Units

  • Marie Louise de Hesselle,
  • Stefan Borgmann,
  • Siegbert Rieg,
  • Jörg Janne Vehreschild,
  • Sebastian Rasch,
  • Carolin E. M. Koll,
  • Martin Hower,
  • Melanie Stecher,
  • Daniel Ebert,
  • Frank Hanses,
  • Julia Schumann,
  • on behalf of the LEOSS Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12072469
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
p. 2469

Abstract

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During the COVID-19 pandemic, large numbers of elderly, multimorbid people required treatment in intensive care units. This study investigated how the inherent patient factors age and comorbidity burden affected the treatment strategy and the outcome achieved. Retrospective analysis of data from intensive care patients enrolled in the Lean European Open Survey on SARS-CoV2-Infected Patients (LEOSS) cohort found that a patient’s age and comorbidity burden in fact influenced their mortality rate and the use of ventilation therapy. Evidence showed that advanced age and multimorbidity were associated with the restrictive use of invasive ventilation therapies, particularly ECMO. Geriatric patients with a high comorbidity burden were clustered in the sub-cohort of non-ventilated ICU patients characterized by a high mortality rate. The risk of death generally increased with older age and accumulating comorbidity burden. Here, the more aggressive an applied procedure, the younger the age in which a majority of patients died. Clearly, geriatric, multimorbid COVID-19 patients benefit less from invasive ventilation therapies. This implies the need for a holistic approach to therapy decisions, taking into account the patient’s wishes.

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