Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Quantification of long-term survival, health care utilization, and costs of prolonged ventilator dependence informs patient/family decision-making, health care policy, and understanding of specialized weaning centers (SWCs) as alternate care models. Our objective was to compare survival trajectory, health care utilization, and costs of SWC survivors with a matched cohort of ≥ 21-d-stay ICU patients.
METHODS:
This was a retrospective longitudinal (12 y) case-control study linking to health administrative databases with matching on age, sex, Charlson comorbidity index, income quintiles, and days in ICU and hospital in preceding 12 months.
RESULTS:
We matched 201 SWC subjects to 201 prolonged ICU survivors (402-subject cohort); 42% had a Charlson score of > 4. Risk of death at 12 months was lower in SWC subjects (hazard ratio [HR] 0.70 [95% CI 0.54–0.91]) adjusting for length of hospital admission (HR 1.02 [95% CI 1.00–1.04]) and number of care location transfers (HR 0.84 [95% CI 0.75–0.93]). By follow-up end, more SWC subjects died, 149 (73%) versus 127 (62%). We found no difference in discharge to home. At 12 months, acute health care utilization was comparable for the entire cohort, except hospital readmission rates (median interquartile range [IQR] 2 [1–3) vs 1 [1–2] d). Median (IQR) cost 12 months after unit discharge was CAD $68,165 ($19,894–$153,475). 12-month costs were higher in the SWC survivors (CAD $82,874 [$29,942–$224,965] vs CAD $55,574 [$6,572–$128,962],
CONCLUSIONS:
SWC admission may confer some medium-term survival advantage; however, this may be influenced by selection bias associated with admission criteria.
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