Objective: To assess the outcome of intensive care unit (ICU) treatment in patients with hematological malignancies.
Design and setting: Retrospective cohort study in the medical ICU of a university hospital.
Patients: 104 critically ill patients after receiving conventional chemotherapy or autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
Interventions: We analyzed demographic data, underlying disease, intensity of antineoplastic regimen, cause of admission, need for mechanical ventilation, and hemofiltration, ICU survival, and survival after discharge, furthermore neutrophil count, C-reactive protein (<or=150 vs. >150 mg/l), antithrombin III, prothrombin time, and SAPS II (<or=50 vs. >50) at ICU admission. All recorded variables were evaluated for prognostic relevance by univariate and multivariate analyses.
Measurements and results: Overall ICU mortality was 44%, with significantly higher mortality in ventilated patients (74% vs. 12% in nonventilated patients, p<0.001). Overall survival for the entire group 6 months and 1 year after ICU admission was 33% and 29%, respectively. Multivariate analysis revealed mechanical ventilation and SAPS II as independent prognostic factors of both ICU mortality and long-term survival, while C-reactive protein predicted only ICU mortality.
Conclusions: The outcome of patients not requiring ventilatory support in this study was encouraging, while invasive ventilation was again confirmed as predicting a dismal prognosis in this population. Efforts should be directed to avoiding this procedure by reducing the pulmonary toxicity of antineoplastic treatment and to making ventilatory support more tolerable.