Patients´ Mental and Physical Health After Covid-19 Treated in ICU in Sweden
NCT ID: NCT06042790
Last Updated: 2023-09-21
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
2500 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2020-03-01
2023-10-08
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Today we know that intensive care patients had a risk to get physical, mental, and cognitive problems long time after hospital discharge. Other common residual problems as anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress (PTSD) can also occurred after intensive care. However, there are an increased risk that ICU patients with Covid-19 experience physical, and mental problems and decreased health related quality of life (HRQoL), then the environment at ICU during the Covid-19 pandemic, could predispose for cognitive failure and PTSD. The knowledge about this is limited. Today, data indicate that fatigue and dyspnoea are common residual symptoms which affect the HRQoL in multiple dimensions long time after hospital discharge.
Since 2005 the Swedish Intensive Care Registry (SIR) recommend to follow-up former ICU patients HRQoL (RAND-36), BMI, ADL and working capacity. We have now a unique chance to describe how patients taken care for Covid-19 in ICU experience their HRQoL with physical, mental, and cognitive problems compared to patients who were cared for in ICU for reasons other than Covid-19, and if they changed over time in relation to changed treatment conditions. It is important to map which risk factors that affect patients HRQoL. International studies show that factors important to HRQoL after intensive care are: age, comorbidity, the severity of the illness, length of stay, diagnose, PTSD, and symptoms of depression. It is likely that other factors also play a decisive role, such as socioeconomics factors. The purpose of this study is to deepen the analyse and identify other factors that are important for the patients HRQoL.
Aim The aim is to increase the knowledge about adult patient's whit Covid-19 taken care of at ICUs in Sweden estimate their HRQoL during the first year after ICU discharge and compare their HRQoL with patients taken care at ICU for other reasons than Covid-19 and which risk-factors affect the HRQoL and if there are any discrepancy between the groups.
Research-questions Are there differences in self-estimated HRQoL between patients care for Covid-19 and patients cared for other reasons at ICU, at 3, 6 and 12 months after ICU discharge? Method Design: National quality register study. Participants/sample size: All adult patients ≥18 year who have been treated at ICUs in Sweden and have a registered follow-up in SIR. (Covid-19 and non-Covid-19).
Data Collection:
Anonymous data collected from the Swedish intensive quality register (SIR), the national patient register in the National board of health and welfare, and the Statistics Sweden (SBC) LISA register for patients cared for in ICU and how have a registered RAND-36 in SIR. The Covid-19 group include patients cared in ICU between 01-03-2020 and as long as the pandemic is ongoing. The non-Covid-19 group includes patients how have been cared in ICU 01-01-2017 until 31-12-2019, before the outbreak of the pandemic to get the best comparing data. The reasons to include data from SIR are 1) to reduce the effort for the patients, to fill in more questionnaires and 2) that the time before outbreak of Covid-19 is more valid to compare with then the intensive care during the Covid-19 pandemic have to deviate from their usual regimen regarding care and treatment as well as the selection of patients and a comparison during the Covid period therefore has a risk of bias Data analysis Data compiled on group-level and to be used to compare between the groups. Quantitative methods are used to describe tendances in the group and analysis of differences between the groups. Data regarding demography and comorbidity analysis descriptively at group level.
Association is investigated with correlation and regression analysis, t-test or corresponding.
Comparison between the groups is done with t-test parametric data and Mann-Whitney non-parametric variables. Identifying of factors influencing the outcome of RAND-36 (HRQoL) is done with univariate regression analysis. Values with significant outcomes are further analysed with multivariate regression analysis for identification of independent risk factors versus outcomes in RAND-36 (HRQoL). The results of variate analysis reports as OR.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
RETROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Covid-19 ICU patients
Patients with confirmed Covid-19 admitted to ICU care
No interventions assigned to this group
non-Covid-19 patients
Non Coivd-19 patients admitted to ICU before 2020
No interventions assigned to this group
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Swedish Intensive Care Registry
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Sten Walther
Associate Professor, MD
Principal Investigators
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Sten Walther, PhD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
Linkoeping University
Locations
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The Swedish Intensive Care Registry
Karlstad, , Sweden
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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SwedishICR
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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