Long-term survival of traumatic brain injury and intra-cerebral haemorrhage patients: A multicentric observational cohort.

Étude médicale

Dantan E, Foucher Y, Simon-Pimmel J, Léger M, Campfort M, Lasocki S, Lakhal K, Bouras M, Roquilly A, Cinotti R, AtlanREA study group

Journal of critical care, septembre 2024 ; 83 : 154843

PURPOSE: Mortality is often assessed during ICU stay and early after, but rarely at later stage. We aimed to compare the long-term mortality between TBI and ICH patients.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: From an observational cohort, we studied 580 TBI patients and 435 ICH patients, admitted from January 2013 to February 2021 in 3 ICUs and alive at 7-days post-ICU discharge. We performed a Lasso-penalized Cox survival analysis.

RESULTS: We estimated 7-year survival rates at 72.8% (95%CI from 67.3% to 78.7%) for ICH patients and at 84.9% (95%CI from 80.9% to 89.1%) for TBI patients: ICH patients presenting a higher mortality risk than TBI patients. Additionally, we identified variables associated with higher mortality risk (age, ICU length of stay, tracheostomy, low GCS, absence of intracranial pressure monitoring). We also observed anisocoria related with the mortality risk in the early stage after ICU stay.

CONCLUSIONS: In this ICU survivor population with a prolonged follow-up, we highlight an acute risk of death after ICU stay, which seems to last longer in ICH patients. Several variables characteristic of disease severity appeared associated with long-term mortality, raising the hypothesis that the most severe patients deserve closer follow-up after ICU stay.