Journal of Clinical Medicine (Feb 2022)

Chronic Critical Illness in Patients with COVID-19: Characteristics and Outcome of Prolonged Intensive Care Therapy

  • Kevin Roedl,
  • Dominik Jarczak,
  • Olaf Boenisch,
  • Geraldine de Heer,
  • Christoph Burdelski,
  • Daniel Frings,
  • Barbara Sensen,
  • Axel Nierhaus,
  • Stefan Kluge,
  • Dominic Wichmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11041049
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. 1049

Abstract

Read online

The spread of SARS-CoV-2 caused a worldwide healthcare threat. High critical care admission rates related to Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) respiratory failure were observed. Medical advances helped increase the number of patients surviving the acute critical illness. However, some patients require prolonged critical care. Data on the outcome of patients with a chronic critical illness (CCI) are scarce. Single-center retrospective study including all adult critically ill patients with confirmed COVID-19 treated at the Department of Intensive Care Medicine at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany, between 1 March 2020 and 8 August 2021. We identified 304 critically ill patients with COVID-19 during the study period. Of those, 55% (n = 167) had an ICU stay ≥21 days and were defined as chronic critical illness, and 45% (n = 137) had an ICU stay p = 0.140) and SOFA score (10 vs. 6, p n = 223) of patients required invasive mechanical ventilation (MV) (86% vs. 58%; p p p p = 0.009) as factors significantly associated with new-onset of CCI. Overall, we observed an ICU mortality of 38% (n = 115) in the study cohort. In patients with CCI we observed an ICU mortality of 28% (n = 46) compared to 50% (n = 69) in patients without CCI (p n = 46) compared to 50% (n = 70), respectively (p < 0.001). More than half of critically ill patients with COVID-19 suffer from CCI. Short and long-term survival rates in patients with CCI were high compared to patients without CCI, and prolonged therapy should not be withheld when resources permit prolonged therapy.

Keywords