News Release

Survival of patients with lung failure depends on health of other organs

Peer-Reviewed Publication

BMC (BioMed Central)

Doctors treating lung failure need to focus on the whole patient to improve the chance of patient survival. Research published on 9th July in Critical Care shows that the survival rate of patients admitted to hospital with lung failure alone is good, but diminishes if other vital organs fail.

Hans Flaatten and colleagues carried out the 30-month study on intensive care unit (ICU) patients at the Haukeland University Hospital, Norway. They followed 529 patients diagnosed with acute respiratory failure (ARF) and measured their outcome in relation to the presence or absence of failure of other vital organs. They found that the mortality rate of patients with ARF alone was surprisingly low, but that it increased with each additional organ failure. Patients who were admitted with ARF alone had a mortality rate of 4.4% at ICU discharge, but this jumped to 33.3% if they were suffering from any additional organ failure at admission.

ICU patients diagnosed with ARF were followed up at three intervals after initial diagnosis – discharge from the intensive care unit, discharge from hospital, and 90 days after initial diagnosis. Patients who were suffering from ARF alone had a mortality rate of only 3.2% at ICU discharge, and rates of 14.7% and 21.8% at hospital discharge and at 90 days, respectively. The failure of only one other vital organ approximately doubled the mortality rates to 11.6%, 28.5% and 43.6%, respectively. When ARF was associated with the failure of four or five vital organs, the three-month mortality rate was as high as 75%.

ARF is the most common type of organ failure seen in the ICU; multiple organ failure is the most common cause of death in ICU patients. Dr. Flaatten said, "It is very important to have the whole patient in focus when treating ARF. Other organ failure is frequent, and needs to be diagnosed and treated if the patient is to have the maximal chance of survival. It is also possible to estimate the chance of survival on the number of organs that have failed. If the patients only have ARF the short and long-term prognosis is quite good."

Arthur Slutsky, research editor for Critical Care and Director of the Interdepartmental Division of Critical Care at the University of Toronto, believes that, "This study demonstrates that in patients with ARF, dysfunction of organs other than the lung is a major contributor to mortality. It emphasizes how critical it is to focus therapy not only on the lung, but also on maintenance in other vital organ function".

This research will prove invaluable in assessing the prognosis of patients with ARF and provides food for thought for doctors treating patients with multiple organ failure.

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This press release is based on the following article:

Outcome after acute respiratory failure is more dependent on dysfunction in other vital organs than on the severity of the respiratory failure.
Hans Flaatten, Stig Gjerde, Anne Berit Guttormsen, Oddbjørn Haugen, Tone Høivik, Henning Onarheim and Sidsel Aardal.
Critical Care 2003, 7:R72-R77
Published 9 July 2003.

Upon publication, this article will be universally available online, without charge according to BioMed Central's open access policy at http://ccforum.com/content/7/4/R72

Please publish the URL in any news report so that your readers will be able to read the original paper.

For more details of this work, please contact Hans Flaatten, by email at hfl@broadpark.no, or by phone on 47-92-42-51-71.

For any other enquiries please contact Gemma Bradley by email at press@biomedcentral.com or by phone on 020-7323-0323 x2331.

This article will be accompanied by a commentary:
Critical Care 2003, 7:288.
This will be available online at http://ccforum.com/content/7/4/288. To receive this prior to publication please contact Gemma Bradley.

Critical Care http://ccforum.com/ is published by BioMed Central (http://www.biomedcentral.com), an independent online publishing house committed to providing immediate free access to peer-reviewed biological and medical research. This commitment is based on the view that open access to research is essential to the rapid and efficient communication of science. In addition to open-access original research, BioMed Central also publishes reviews and other subscription-based content.


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