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Very old patients are a rapidly growing and vulnerable population in acute cardiovascular care but remain underrepresented in clinical trials. Clinical outcomes in older intensive care unit (ICU) patients are determined less by chronological age than by their clinical phenotype, including cardiovascular comorbidities, frailty, polypharmacy, and functional and cognitive impairment. This prospective multicenter observational study aims to assess the impact of chronic and acute cardiovascular diseases on long-term outcomes and functional trajectories in older ICU patients. Using the international VIP research network, approximately 4,000 patients will be enrolled across different ICU specialties and healthcare systems and assessed multidimensionally using validated clinical scores. The study seeks to improve risk stratification and outcome prediction in older critically ill patients with cardiovascular disease and to address existing evidence gaps in acute cardiovascular and intensive care medicine.
Full description
The primary aim of this prospective multicenter observational study is to investigate the impact of chronic and acute cardiovascular diseases on the clinical phenotype, short-term outcomes, and long-term functional trajectories of older intensive care unit (ICU) patients. The main hypothesis is that patients with chronic or acute cardiovascular diseases differ in their pre-ICU clinical phenotype and have a higher risk of adverse short-term outcomes and impaired long-term functional recovery compared with patients without these conditions. Using the established international VIP research network, older ICU patients will be assessed multidimensionally using validated instruments and routinely collected clinical data across different ICU specialties (cardiac, cardio-surgical, internal medicine, and surgical ICUs) and healthcare systems.
The primary endpoint of the study is 6-month all-cause mortality. Secondary endpoints include functional status and health-related quality of life during follow-up.
Pre-existing comorbidities will be captured using the AHRQ Elixhauser Comorbidity Index, with detailed documentation of chronic cardiovascular comorbidities and medication history. Frailty and functional status will be assessed using the Clinical Frailty Scale and the Katz Index, while baseline cognitive function will be evaluated using the Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQCODE). Health-related quality of life prior to the acute illness will be assessed using the EQ-5D-5L. Nutritional status will be evaluated using the Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index (GNRI) and the Global Leadership Initiative on Malnutrition (GLIM) criteria (e.g. body weight and dietary history) At ICU admission and during the ICU stay, routinely available laboratory parameters including albumin, lactate, international normalized ratio (INR), HbA1c, and hemoglobin will be recorded. Disease severity will be assessed using the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score at admission and during follow-up. Data on ICU interventions, including invasive mechanical ventilation, vasopressor therapy, renal replacement therapy, mechanical circulatory support, enteral and parenteral nutrition, and physiotherapy, will be documented. Hemoglobin levels at ICU admission and discharge as well as the highest and lowest values during the ICU stay will be captured.
Approximately 4,000 patients are planned to be enrolled within 12 months, allowing predefined subgroup analyses according to age, sex, frailty status, and cognitive function using advanced exploratory analytical approaches. The study aims to contribute to closing the existing evidence gap regarding chronic and acute cardiovascular disease in older critically ill patients
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Lisa Dannenberg, MD; Christian Jung, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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