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Abnormal shock index exposure and clinical outcomes among critically ill patients: A retrospective cohort analysis

Kamal Maheshwari, Brian H. Nathanson, Sibyl H. Munson, Seungyoung Hwang, Halit O. Yapici, Mitali Stevens, Carlos A. Jiménez Ruiz, Charles Hunley

2020Journal of Critical Care25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: To assess the predictive value of a single abnormal shock index reading (SI ≥0.9; heart rate/systolic blood pressure [SBP]) for mortality, and association between cumulative abnormal SI exposure and mortality/morbidity. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Cohort comprised of adult patients with an intensive care unit (ICU) stay ≥24-h (years 2010-2018). SI ≥0.9 exposure was evaluated via cumulative minutes or time-weighted average; SBP ≤100-mmHg was analyzed. Outcomes were in-hospital mortality, acute kidney injury (AKI), and myocardial injury. RESULTS: 18,197 patients from 82 hospitals were analyzed. Any single SI ≥0.9 within the ICU predicted mortality with 90.8% sensitivity and 36.8% specificity. Every 0.1-unit increase in maximum-SI during the first 24-h increased the odds of mortality by 4.8% [95%CI; 2.6-7.0%; p < .001]. Every 4-h exposure to SI ≥0.9 increased the odds of death by 5.8% [95%CI; 4.6-7.0%; p < .001], AKI by 4.3% [95%CI; 3.7-4.9%; p < .001] and myocardial injury by 2.1% [95%CI; 1.2-3.1%; p < .001]. ≥2-h exposure to SBP ≤100-mmHg was significantly associated with mortality. CONCLUSIONS: A single SI reading ≥0.9 is a poor predictor of mortality; cumulative SI exposure is associated with greater risk of mortality/morbidity. The associations with in-hospital mortality were comparable for SI ≥0.9 or SBP ≤100-mmHg exposure. Dynamic interactions between hemodynamic variables need further evaluation among critically ill patients.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCritically illRetrospective cohort studyIntensive care medicineCohortShock (circulatory)Index (typography)Emergency medicineInternal medicineWorld Wide WebComputer scienceSepsis Diagnosis and TreatmentTrauma, Hemostasis, Coagulopathy, ResuscitationHemodynamic Monitoring and Therapy