• Neurocritical care · Apr 2024

    Review

    Survivorship After Neurocritical Care: A Scoping Review of Outcomes Beyond Physical Status.

    • Jamie Nicole LaBuzetta, Dale N Bongbong, Eric Mlodzinski, Richa Sheth, Aaron Trando, Nicholas Ibrahim, Brandon Yip, Atul Malhotra, Victor D Dinglas, Dale M Needham, and Biren B Kamdar.
    • Division of Neurocritical Care, Department of Neurosciences, University of California, San Diego Health, 9444 Medical Center Dr., East Campus Office Building 3-028, La Jolla, CA, 92037-7740, USA. jlabuzetta@health.ucsd.edu.
    • Neurocrit Care. 2024 Apr 15.

    AbstractFollowing intensive care unit hospitalization, survivors of acute neurological injury often experience debilitating short-term and long-term impairments. Although the physical/motor impairments experienced by survivors of acute neurological injury have been described extensively, fewer studies have examined cognitive, mental health, health-related quality of life (HRQoL), and employment outcomes. This scoping review describes the publication landscape beyond physical and/or motor sequelae in neurocritical care survivors. Databases were searched for terms related to critical illness, intensive care, and outcomes from January 1970 to March 2022. English-language studies of critically ill adults with a primary neurological diagnosis were included if they reported on at least one outcome of interest: cognition, mental health, HRQoL or employment. Data extraction was performed in duplicate for prespecified variables related to study outcomes. Of 16,036 abstracts screened, 74 citations were identified for inclusion. The studies encompassed seven worldwide regions and eight neurocritical diagnosis categories. Publications reporting outcomes of interest increased from 3 before the year 2000 to 71 after. Follow-up time points included ≤ 1 (n = 15 [20%] citations), 3 (n = 28 [38%]), 6 (n = 28 [38%]), and 12 (n = 21 [28%]) months and 1 to 5 (n = 19 [26%]) and > 5 years (n = 8 [11%]), with 28 (38%) citations evaluating outcomes at multiple time points. Sixty-six assessment tools were used to evaluate the four outcomes of interest: 22 evaluating HRQoL (56 [76%] citations), 21 evaluating cognition (20 [27%] citations), 21 evaluating mental health (18 [24%] citations), and 2 evaluating employment (9 [12%] citations). This scoping review aimed to better understand the literature landscape regarding nonphysical outcomes in survivors of neurocritical care. Although a rising number of publications highlight growing awareness, future efforts are needed to improve study consistency and comparability and characterize outcomes in a disease-specific manner, including outlining of a minimum core outcomes set and associated assessment tools.© 2024. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature and Neurocritical Care Society.

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