Intensive care in patients with lung cancer : a multinational study

Soares, M, Toffart, A-C, Timsit, J-F, Burghi, G, Irrazábal, C, Pattison, N, Tobar, E, Almeida, B F C, Silva, U V A, Azevedo, L C P, Rabbat, A, Lamer, C, Parrot, A, Souza-Dantas, V C, Wallet, F, Blot, F, Bourdin, G, Piras, C, Delemazure, J, Durand, M, Tejera, D, Salluh, J I F, Azoulay, E and Lung Cancer in Critical Care (LUCCA) Study Investigators (2014) Intensive care in patients with lung cancer : a multinational study. pp. 1829-35. ISSN 0923-7534
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BACKGROUND: Detailed information about lung cancer patients requiring admission to intensive care units (ICUs) is mostly restricted to single-center studies. Our aim was to evaluate the clinical characteristics and outcomes of lung cancer patients admitted to ICUs. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Prospective multicenter study in 449 patients with lung cancer (small cell, n = 55; non-small cell, n = 394) admitted to 22 ICUs in six countries in Europe and South America during 2011. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards frailty models were built to identify characteristics associated with 30-day and 6-month mortality. RESULTS: Most of the patients (71%) had newly diagnosed cancer. Cancer-related complications occurred in 56% of patients; the most common was tumoral airway involvement (26%). Ventilatory support was required in 53% of patients. Overall hospital, 30-day, and 6-month mortality rates were 39%, 41%, and 55%, respectively. After adjustment for type of admission and early treatment-limitation decisions, determinants of mortality were organ dysfunction severity, poor performance status (PS), recurrent/progressive cancer, and cancer-related complications. Mortality rates were far lower in the patient subset with nonrecurrent/progressive cancer and a good PS, even those with sepsis, multiple organ dysfunctions, and need for ventilatory support. Mortality was also lower in high-volume centers. Poor PS predicted failure to receive the initially planned cancer treatment after hospital discharge. CONCLUSIONS: ICU admission was associated with meaningful survival in lung cancer patients with good PS and non-recurrent/progressive disease. Conversely, mortality rates were very high in patients not fit for anticancer treatment and poor PS. In this subgroup, palliative care may be the best option.

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