Characteristics and provision of care of patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome: descriptive findings from the DACAPO cohort baseline and comparison with international findings

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Characteristics and provision of care of patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome: descriptive findings from the DACAPO cohort baseline and comparison with international findings. / Dodoo-Schittko, Frank; Brandstetter, Susanne; Brandl, Magdalena; Blecha, Sebastian; Quintel, Michael; Weber-Carstens, Steffen; Kluge, Stefan; Meybohm, Patrick; Rolfes, Caroline; Ellger, Björn; Bach, Friedhelm; Welte, Tobias; Muders, Thomas; Thomann-Hackner, Kathrin; Bein, Thomas; Apfelbacher, Christian.

in: J THORAC DIS, Jahrgang 9, Nr. 3, 03.2017, S. 818-830.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Dodoo-Schittko, F, Brandstetter, S, Brandl, M, Blecha, S, Quintel, M, Weber-Carstens, S, Kluge, S, Meybohm, P, Rolfes, C, Ellger, B, Bach, F, Welte, T, Muders, T, Thomann-Hackner, K, Bein, T & Apfelbacher, C 2017, 'Characteristics and provision of care of patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome: descriptive findings from the DACAPO cohort baseline and comparison with international findings', J THORAC DIS, Jg. 9, Nr. 3, S. 818-830. https://doi.org/10.21037/jtd.2017.03.120

APA

Dodoo-Schittko, F., Brandstetter, S., Brandl, M., Blecha, S., Quintel, M., Weber-Carstens, S., Kluge, S., Meybohm, P., Rolfes, C., Ellger, B., Bach, F., Welte, T., Muders, T., Thomann-Hackner, K., Bein, T., & Apfelbacher, C. (2017). Characteristics and provision of care of patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome: descriptive findings from the DACAPO cohort baseline and comparison with international findings. J THORAC DIS, 9(3), 818-830. https://doi.org/10.21037/jtd.2017.03.120

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{d00fd88914464b8ba5057499fcc166c8,
title = "Characteristics and provision of care of patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome: descriptive findings from the DACAPO cohort baseline and comparison with international findings",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Little is known about the characteristics and real world life circumstances of ARDS (acute respiratory distress syndrome) patient populations. This knowledge is essential for transferring evidence-based therapy into routine healthcare. The aim of this study was to report socio-demographic and clinical characteristics in an unselected population of ARDS patients and to compare these results to findings from other large ARDS cohorts.METHODS: A German based cross-sectional observational study was carried out. A total of 700 ARDS patients were recruited in 59 study sites between September 2014 and January 2016. Socio-demographic, disease and care related variables were recorded. Additionally, characteristics of other large ARDS cohorts identified by a systematic literature search were extracted into evidence tables.RESULTS: Median age of ARDS patients was 58 years, 69% were male. Sixty percent had no employment, predominantly due to retirement. Seventy-one percent lived with a partner. The main cause of ARDS was a pulmonary 'direct' origin (79%). The distribution of severity was as follows: mild (14%), moderate (48%), severe (38%). Overall ICU mortality was calculated to be 34%. The observed prevalence of critical events (hypoxemia, hypoglycemia, re-intubation) was 47%. Supportive measures during ICU-treatment were applied to 60% of the patients. Other ARDS cohorts revealed a high heterogeneity in reported concomitant diseases, but sepsis and pneumonia were most frequently reported. Mean age ranged from 54 to 71 years and most patients were male. Other socio-demographic factors have been almost neglected.CONCLUSIONS: The proportion of patients suffering of mild ARDS was lower compared to the only study identified, which also applied the Berlin definition. The frequency of critical events during ICU treatment was high and the implementation of evidence-based therapy (prone positioning, neuro-muscular blockers) was limited. More evidence on socio-demographic characteristics and further studies applying the current diagnostic criteria are desirable.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Frank Dodoo-Schittko and Susanne Brandstetter and Magdalena Brandl and Sebastian Blecha and Michael Quintel and Steffen Weber-Carstens and Stefan Kluge and Patrick Meybohm and Caroline Rolfes and Bj{\"o}rn Ellger and Friedhelm Bach and Tobias Welte and Thomas Muders and Kathrin Thomann-Hackner and Thomas Bein and Christian Apfelbacher",
year = "2017",
month = mar,
doi = "10.21037/jtd.2017.03.120",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "818--830",
journal = "J THORAC DIS",
issn = "2072-1439",
publisher = "Pioneer Bioscience Publishing Company (PBPC)",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Characteristics and provision of care of patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome: descriptive findings from the DACAPO cohort baseline and comparison with international findings

AU - Dodoo-Schittko, Frank

AU - Brandstetter, Susanne

AU - Brandl, Magdalena

AU - Blecha, Sebastian

AU - Quintel, Michael

AU - Weber-Carstens, Steffen

AU - Kluge, Stefan

AU - Meybohm, Patrick

AU - Rolfes, Caroline

AU - Ellger, Björn

AU - Bach, Friedhelm

AU - Welte, Tobias

AU - Muders, Thomas

AU - Thomann-Hackner, Kathrin

AU - Bein, Thomas

AU - Apfelbacher, Christian

PY - 2017/3

Y1 - 2017/3

N2 - BACKGROUND: Little is known about the characteristics and real world life circumstances of ARDS (acute respiratory distress syndrome) patient populations. This knowledge is essential for transferring evidence-based therapy into routine healthcare. The aim of this study was to report socio-demographic and clinical characteristics in an unselected population of ARDS patients and to compare these results to findings from other large ARDS cohorts.METHODS: A German based cross-sectional observational study was carried out. A total of 700 ARDS patients were recruited in 59 study sites between September 2014 and January 2016. Socio-demographic, disease and care related variables were recorded. Additionally, characteristics of other large ARDS cohorts identified by a systematic literature search were extracted into evidence tables.RESULTS: Median age of ARDS patients was 58 years, 69% were male. Sixty percent had no employment, predominantly due to retirement. Seventy-one percent lived with a partner. The main cause of ARDS was a pulmonary 'direct' origin (79%). The distribution of severity was as follows: mild (14%), moderate (48%), severe (38%). Overall ICU mortality was calculated to be 34%. The observed prevalence of critical events (hypoxemia, hypoglycemia, re-intubation) was 47%. Supportive measures during ICU-treatment were applied to 60% of the patients. Other ARDS cohorts revealed a high heterogeneity in reported concomitant diseases, but sepsis and pneumonia were most frequently reported. Mean age ranged from 54 to 71 years and most patients were male. Other socio-demographic factors have been almost neglected.CONCLUSIONS: The proportion of patients suffering of mild ARDS was lower compared to the only study identified, which also applied the Berlin definition. The frequency of critical events during ICU treatment was high and the implementation of evidence-based therapy (prone positioning, neuro-muscular blockers) was limited. More evidence on socio-demographic characteristics and further studies applying the current diagnostic criteria are desirable.

AB - BACKGROUND: Little is known about the characteristics and real world life circumstances of ARDS (acute respiratory distress syndrome) patient populations. This knowledge is essential for transferring evidence-based therapy into routine healthcare. The aim of this study was to report socio-demographic and clinical characteristics in an unselected population of ARDS patients and to compare these results to findings from other large ARDS cohorts.METHODS: A German based cross-sectional observational study was carried out. A total of 700 ARDS patients were recruited in 59 study sites between September 2014 and January 2016. Socio-demographic, disease and care related variables were recorded. Additionally, characteristics of other large ARDS cohorts identified by a systematic literature search were extracted into evidence tables.RESULTS: Median age of ARDS patients was 58 years, 69% were male. Sixty percent had no employment, predominantly due to retirement. Seventy-one percent lived with a partner. The main cause of ARDS was a pulmonary 'direct' origin (79%). The distribution of severity was as follows: mild (14%), moderate (48%), severe (38%). Overall ICU mortality was calculated to be 34%. The observed prevalence of critical events (hypoxemia, hypoglycemia, re-intubation) was 47%. Supportive measures during ICU-treatment were applied to 60% of the patients. Other ARDS cohorts revealed a high heterogeneity in reported concomitant diseases, but sepsis and pneumonia were most frequently reported. Mean age ranged from 54 to 71 years and most patients were male. Other socio-demographic factors have been almost neglected.CONCLUSIONS: The proportion of patients suffering of mild ARDS was lower compared to the only study identified, which also applied the Berlin definition. The frequency of critical events during ICU treatment was high and the implementation of evidence-based therapy (prone positioning, neuro-muscular blockers) was limited. More evidence on socio-demographic characteristics and further studies applying the current diagnostic criteria are desirable.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.21037/jtd.2017.03.120

DO - 10.21037/jtd.2017.03.120

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 28449491

VL - 9

SP - 818

EP - 830

JO - J THORAC DIS

JF - J THORAC DIS

SN - 2072-1439

IS - 3

ER -