2019冠状病毒病大流行对德国医院脑死亡检测的影响:对全州健康数据的分析

Q2 Medicine
Daniela Schoene, Martin Roessler, Katharina Eder, Albrecht Günther, Konrad Pleul, Axel Rahmel, Kristian Barlinn
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:德国器官捐献率低与医院对脑死亡(BD)患者的检测不足有关。目前尚不清楚与危机相关的卫生系统中断(如COVID-19大流行)如何影响这一检测缺陷。方法:对萨克森州、萨克森-安哈尔特州和图林根州大流行前和大流行期间(2019年1月- 2022年12月)急性脑损伤死亡患者的匿名数据进行二次数据分析。根据主要的SARS-CoV-2变体对大流行阶段进行分层。采用Logistic多层模型来评估结果,包括双相障碍的诊断、死亡器官捐赠、潜在双相障碍的遗漏病例以及与德国器官采购组织的器官捐赠相关的互动。模型考虑了区域COVID-19发病率和首次疫苗接种率,以及年龄、性别和脑损伤类型。结果:对来自136家医院的11100名死者进行了分析。COVID-19发病率与BD测定呈负相关(校正优势比[aOR] 0.94, 95%CI [0.91;0.97);结论:大流行期间对双相障碍检测的初步影响突出了卫生系统在危机时期适应能力的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on brain death detection in German hospitals: a state-wide analysis of health data.

Background: The low rate of organ donation in Germany has been linked to a deficit in the detection of patients with brain death (BD) in hospitals. It is unclear how crisis-related health system disruptions, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, affect this detection deficit.

Methods: Secondary data analysis of anonymized data from deceased patients with acute brain injury from Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia during the pre-pandemic and pandemic period (01/2019-12/2022). Pandemic phases were stratified according to the predominant SARS-CoV-2 variant. Logistic multilevel models were employed to assess outcomes including diagnosis of BD, deceased organ donations, missed cases with potential BD and organ donation-related interactions with the German Organ procurement organization. Models accounted for regional COVID-19 incidence and first-dose vaccination rates, as well as age, gender and types of brain injuries.

Results: A total of 11,100 deceased individuals from 136 hospitals were analyzed. An inverse association was observed between COVID-19 incidence and the determination of BD (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 0.94, 95%CI [0.91; 0.97]; p < 0.001) as well as deceased organ donation (aOR 0.94, 95%CI [0.90; 0.98]; p = 0.001). When stratified by pandemic phases, this inverse association was evident for both BD determination (aOR 0.92, 95%CI [0.87; 0.99]; p = 0.02) and deceased organ donation (aOR 0.90, 95%CI [0.83; 0.97]; p = 0.01) during the initial wild-type phase. In the alpha phase, the association was observed only for BD determination (aOR 0.76, 95%CI [0.59; 0.98]; p = 0.03). No association was found in subsequent pandemic phases.

Conclusion: The initial impact on BD detection during the pandemic highlights the importance of the health system's adaptive capacity in times of crisis.

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