• Critical care medicine · Dec 2023

    Healthcare Trajectories and Outcomes in the First Year After Tracheostomy Based on Patient Characteristics.

    • Anuj B Mehta, Daniel D Matlock, Andrew F Shorr, and Ivor S Douglas.
    • Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, Denver Health and Hospital Authority, Denver, CO.
    • Crit. Care Med. 2023 Dec 1; 51 (12): 172717391727-1739.

    ObjectivesTo define healthcare trajectories after tracheostomy to inform shared decision-making efforts for critically ill patients.DesignRetrospective epidemiologic cohort study.SettingCalifornia Patient Discharge Database 2018-2019.PatientsPatients who received a tracheostomy.InterventionsNone.Measurements And Main ResultsWe tracked 1-year outcomes after tracheostomy, including survival and time alive in and out of a healthcare facility (HCF. Patients were stratified based on surgical status (did the patient require a major operating room procedure or not), age (65 yr old or older and less than 65 yr), pre-ICU comorbid states (frailty, chronic organ dysfunction, cancer, and robustness), and the need for dialysis during the tracheostomy admission. We identified 4,274 nonsurgical adults who received a tracheostomy during the study period with 50.9% being 65 years old or older. Among adults 65 years old or older, median survival after tracheostomy was less than 3 months for individuals with frailty, chronic organ dysfunction, cancer, or dialysis. Median survival was 3 months for adults younger than 65 years with cancer or dialysis. Most patients spent the majority of days alive after a tracheostomy in an HCF in the first 3 months. Older adults had very few days alive and out of an HCF in the first 3 months after tracheostomy. Most patients who ultimately died in the first year after tracheostomy spent almost all days alive in an HCF.ConclusionsCumulative mortality and median survival after a tracheostomy were very poor across most ages and groups. Older adults and several subgroups of younger adults experienced high rates of prolonged hospitalization with few days alive and out of an HCF. This information may aid some patients, surrogates, and providers in decision-making.Copyright © 2023 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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