Dominic Keuskamp PhD , Christopher E. Davies PhD , Paul J. Secombe BMBS (Hons) MClinSc FCICM , David V. Pilcher MBBS MRCP(UK) FRACP FCICM , Shaila Chavan MSPH , Sarah L. Jones MBChB (Hons) MRCP(UK) DICM(UK) FCICM FRACP , Benjamin E. Reddi MA PhD FRCP(UK) FCICM , Stephen P. McDonald MBBS (Hons) PhD FRACP
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective
Limited data are available on intensive care unit (ICU) admissions for adults receiving kidney replacement therapy (KRT – dialysis or transplantation) in Australia. Our aim is to characterise admissions for patients receiving long-term dialysis and kidney transplant recipients relative to the general intensive care population in Australia.
Design
Retrospective registry-based data linkage cohort study.
Setting
All ICUs in Australia that reported to the Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society Adult Patient Database, 1 January 2018–31 December 2020.
Participants
All admissions were included. Data were deterministically linked to the Australia and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant (ANZDATA) Registry. Subgroups analysed were defined by sex, age, admission type, APACHE III-j diagnostic category, diabetes status, body mass index (BMI), dialysis modality, dialysis vintage, and kidney transplant vintage.
Outcome measures
Admission to ICU for patients receiving KRT at the time of admission (as reported to the ANZDATA Registry).
Results
Patients receiving long-term dialysis prior to admission and those with a kidney transplant numbered 2826 (0.6% of all admissions) and 1194 (0.3%), respectively. Age-sex standardised admission rates relative to the non-KRT cohort (n = 438,271 or 99.1%) were highest for long-term dialysis patients (relative rate 10.18 [95% CI: 9.46,10.93]) and associated with diabetes and sepsis, cardiovascular and respiratory diagnoses.
Conclusions
Rates of ICU admission for people receiving long-term dialysis or kidney transplantation were many times higher than the general population, with particularly increased relative risk among younger age groups and for key medical diagnoses. Given the burden on patients and health services, exploration of strategies to reduce this risk is important.
期刊介绍:
ritical Care and Resuscitation (CC&R) is the official scientific journal of the College of Intensive Care Medicine (CICM). The Journal is a quarterly publication (ISSN 1441-2772) with original articles of scientific and clinical interest in the specialities of Critical Care, Intensive Care, Anaesthesia, Emergency Medicine and related disciplines.
The Journal is received by all Fellows and trainees, along with an increasing number of subscribers from around the world.
The CC&R Journal currently has an impact factor of 3.3, placing it in 8th position in world critical care journals and in first position in the world outside the USA and Europe.