Background: Invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) in COVID-19 patients has been associated with a high mortality rate. In this context, the utility of tracheostomy has been questioned in this group of ill patients. This study aims to compare in-hospital mortality in COVID-19 patients with and without tracheostomy due to prolonged IMV Methods: Cohort study of adult COVID-19 patients subjected to prolonged IMV. Since the first COVID-19 case (March 3, 2020) up to November 30, 2020, all adult critical patients supported with IMV by 10 days or more at the Hospital Clínico Universidad de Chile will be included in the cohort. Pregnant women and non-adult patients will be excluded. Baseline characteristics, comorbidities, laboratory data, disease severity, and ventilatory support will be retrospectively collected from clinical records. The indication of tracheostomy, as part of our standard of care, will be indicated by a team of specialists in intensive care medicine, following national guidelines, and consented to by the patient's family. The 90-days mortality rate will be the primary outcome, whereas IMV days, hospital/CU length of stay, and the frequency of healthcare-associated infections will be the secondary outcomes. Also, a follow-up interview will be performed one year after a hospital discharged in order to assess the vital status and quality of life. The mortality of patients subjected to tracheostomy will be compared with the group of patients without tracheostomy by logistic regression models. Furthermore, propensity-score methods will be performed as a complementary analysis.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
100
Intensive Care Unit, Hospital Clínico Universidad de Chile
Santiago, Chile
RECRUITING90-days mortality rate
Death occurred during the follow-up
Time frame: Since mechanical ventilation onset to death or 90-days follow-up
Hospital length of stay
Days from hospital admission to discharge
Time frame: From hospital admission to discharge, up to 90 days
ICU length of stay
Days elapsed in the first ICU admission
Time frame: From first ICU admission to transfer at a lower complexity unit, up to 90 days
Time of mechanical ventilation
Days of invasive ventilatory support
Time frame: From orotracheal intubation to mechanical ventilation extubation (weaning), up to 90 days
Health-care associated infections
Frequency of respiratory, urinary tract, blood stream and invasive device-related infections
Time frame: From hospital admission to discharge, up to 90 days
Long-term quality of life assessed by Short Form-36 Health Survey, SF-36
Score on the the Short Form-36 Health Survey (SF-36). SF-36 is a 36-item questionary that assesses the quality of life on eight health-related aspects. It scores from 0 (maximum disability) to 100 (no disability): the lower the score the more disability.
Time frame: One year after hospital discharge
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