Journal of Infection and Public Health (Sep 2016)

Obesity in critically ill patients is associated with increased need of mechanical ventilation but not with mortality

  • Sascha Tafelski,
  • Hailong Yi,
  • Fakher Ismaeel,
  • Alexander Krannich,
  • Claudia Spies,
  • Irit Nachtigall

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 5
pp. 577 – 585

Abstract

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Summary: Worldwide incidence of obesity is increasing and impaired outcome in postoperative patients has been described. Antibiotic prescribing is complicated by different pharmacology in this population. This study evaluates mortality and morbidity of obese postoperative patients and explores possible relation to antibiotic therapy. Therefore, data obtained in a prospective study in 2009–2010 were analysed. Postoperative patients on 5 ICUs were included with >48 h of ICU treatment and documented body-mass-index (BMI). Altogether 451 non-obese patients (BMI 0.999), but 65.4% of obese patients required mechanical ventilation compared with only 53.2% of non-obese patients (p = 0.016). These findings were validated in multivariate regression analyses (adjusted OR for ICU-mortality for obese patients 0.53, 95%-CI 0.188–1.321, p = 0.197; adjusted OR for mechanical ventilation 1.841, 95%-CI 1.113–3.076, p = 0.018). Results were confirmed by propensity score matching. Therapeutic drug monitoring for vancomycin (TDM) showed that underdosing and overdosing occurred more often in obese patients and sufficient TDM levels were less often achieved. In conclusion, obesity is associated with increased morbidity but ICU mortality is equal compared with a non-obese population. Pharmacological differences might explain observed differences in antibiotic therapy and in obese patients TDM might be especially of importance. Keywords: Obesity, Adiposity, Antibiotics, Mortality, Therapeutic drug monitoring