PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Tracheostomy and long-term mortality in ICU patients undergoing prolonged mechanical ventilation.

  • Raphaël Cinotti,
  • Sebastian Voicu,
  • Samir Jaber,
  • Benjamin Chousterman,
  • Catherine Paugam-Burtz,
  • Haikel Oueslati,
  • Charles Damoisel,
  • Anaïs Caillard,
  • Antoine Roquilly,
  • Fanny Feuillet,
  • Alexandre Mebazaa,
  • Etienne Gayat,
  • FROG-ICU investigators

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220399
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 10
p. e0220399

Abstract

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INTRODUCTION:In critically ill patients undergoing prolonged mechanical ventilation (MV), the difference in long-term outcomes between patients with or without tracheostomy remains unexplored. METHODS:Ancillary study of a prospective international multicentre observational cohort in 21 centres in France and Belgium, including 2087 patients, with a one-year follow-up after admission. We included patients with a MV duration ≥10 days, with or without tracheostomy. We explored the one-year mortality with a classical Cox regression model (adjustment on age, SAPS II, baseline diagnosis and withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies) and a Cox regression model using tracheostomy as a time-dependant variable. RESULTS:29.5% patients underwent prolonged MV, out of which 25.6% received tracheostomy and 74.4% did not. At one-year, 45.2% patients had died in the tracheostomy group and 51.5% patients had died in the group without tracheostomy (p = 0.001). In the Cox-adjusted regression model, tracheostomy was not associated with improved one-year outcome (HR CI95 0.7 [0.5-1.001], p = 0.051), as well as in the model using tracheostomy as a time-dependent variable (OR CI 95 1 [0.7-1.4], p = 0.9). CONCLUSIONS:In our study, there was no statistically significant difference in the one-year mortality of patients undergoing prolonged MV when receiving tracheostomy or not. TRIAL REGISTRATION:NCT01367093.