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  3. Variations in end-of-life practices in intensive care units worldwide (Ethicus-2): a prospective observational study.
 

Variations in end-of-life practices in intensive care units worldwide (Ethicus-2): a prospective observational study.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/158351
Publisher DOI
10.1016/S2213-2600(21)00261-7
PubMed ID
34364537
Description
BACKGROUND

End-of-life practices vary among intensive care units (ICUs) worldwide. Differences can result in variable use of disproportionate or non-beneficial life-sustaining interventions across diverse world regions. This study investigated global disparities in end-of-life practices.

METHODS

In this prospective, multinational, observational study, consecutive adult ICU patients who died or had a limitation of life-sustaining treatment (withholding or withdrawing life-sustaining therapy and active shortening of the dying process) during a 6-month period between Sept 1, 2015, and Sept 30, 2016, were recruited from 199 ICUs in 36 countries. The primary outcome was the end-of-life practice as defined by the end-of-life categories: withholding or withdrawing life-sustaining therapy, active shortening of the dying process, or failed cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). Patients with brain death were included in a separate predefined end-of-life category. Data collection included patient characteristics, diagnoses, end-of-life decisions and their timing related to admission and discharge, or death, with comparisons across different regions. Patients were studied until death or 2 months from the first limitation decision.

FINDINGS

Of 87 951 patients admitted to ICU, 12 850 (14·6%) were included in the study population. The number of patients categorised into each of the different end-of-life categories were significantly different for each region (p<0·001). Limitation of life-sustaining treatment occurred in 10 401 patients (11·8% of 87 951 ICU admissions and 80·9% of 12 850 in the study population). The most common limitation was withholding life-sustaining treatment (5661 [44·1%]), followed by withdrawing life-sustaining treatment (4680 [36·4%]). More treatment withdrawing was observed in Northern Europe (1217 [52·8%] of 2305) and Australia/New Zealand (247 [45·7%] of 541) than in Latin America (33 [5·8%] of 571) and Africa (21 [13·0%] of 162). Shortening of the dying process was uncommon across all regions (60 [0·5%]). One in five patients with treatment limitations survived hospitalisation. Death due to failed CPR occurred in 1799 (14%) of the study population, and brain death occurred in 650 (5·1%). Failure of CPR occurred less frequently in Northern Europe (85 [3·7%] of 2305), Australia/New Zealand (23 [4·3%] of 541), and North America (78 [8·5%] of 918) than in Africa (106 [65·4%] of 162), Latin America (160 [28·0%] of 571), and Southern Europe (590 [22·5%] of 2622). Factors associated with treatment limitations were region, age, and diagnoses (acute and chronic), and country end-of-life legislation.

INTERPRETATION

Limitation of life-sustaining therapies is common worldwide with regional variability. Withholding treatment is more common than withdrawing treatment. Variations in type, frequency, and timing of end-of-life decisions were observed. Recognising regional differences and the reasons behind these differences might help improve end-of-life care worldwide.

FUNDING

None.
Date of Publication
2021-10
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Avidan, Alexander
Sprung, Charles L
Schefold, Jörg Christian
Universitätsklinik für Intensivmedizin
Ricou, Bara
Hartog, Christiane S
Nates, Joseph L
Jaschinski, Ulrich
Lobo, Suzana M
Joynt, Gavin M
Lesieur, Olivier
Weiss, Manfred
Antonelli, Massimo
Bülow, Hans-Henrik
Bocci, Maria G
Robertsen, Annette
Anstey, Matthew H
Estébanez-Montiel, Belén
Lautrette, Alexandre
Gruber, Anastasiia
Estella, Angel
Mullick, Sudakshina
Sreedharan, Roshni
Michalsen, Andrej
Feldman, Charles
Tisljar, Kai
Posch, Martin
Ovu, Steven
Tamowicz, Barbara
Demoule, Alexandre
DeKeyser Ganz, Freda
Pargger, Hans
Noto, Alberto
Metnitz, Philipp
Zubek, Laszlo
de la Guardia, Veronica
Danbury, Christopher M
Szűcs, Orsolya
Protti, Alessandro
Filipe, Mario
Simpson, Steven Q
Green, Cameron
Giannini, Alberto M
Soliman, Ivo W
Piras, Claudio
Caser, Eliana B
Hache-Marliere, Manuel
Mentzelopoulos, Spyros D
Additional Credits
Universitätsklinik für Intensivmedizin
Series
The lancet. Respiratory medicine
Publisher
Elsevier
ISSN
2213-2600
Access(Rights)
restricted
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