Abstract

BackgroundDischarge destination after critical illness is increasingly recognized as a valuable patient-centered outcome. Recently, vitamin D status has been shown to be associated with important outcomes such as length of stay (LOS) and mortality in intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Our goal was to investigate whether vitamin D status on ICU admission is associated with discharge destination.MethodsWe performed a retrospective analysis from an ongoing prospective cohort study of vitamin D status in critical illness. Patients were recruited from two surgical ICUs at a single teaching hospital in Boston, Massachusetts. All patients had 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) levels measured within 24 h of ICU admission. Discharge destination was dichotomized as non-home or home. Locally weighted scatterplot smoothing (LOWESS) was used to graph the relationship between 25OHD levels and discharge destination. To investigate the association between 25OHD level and discharge destination, we performed logistic regression analyses, controlling for age, sex, race, body mass index, socioeconomic status, acute physiology and chronic health evaluation II score, need for emergent vs. non-emergent surgery, vitamin D supplementation status, and hospital LOS.Results300 patients comprised the analytic cohort. Mean 25OHD level was 19 (standard deviation 8) ng/mL and 41 % of patients had a non-home discharge destination. LOWESS analysis demonstrated a near-inverse linear relationship between vitamin D status and non-home discharge destination to 25OHD levels around 10 ng/mL, with rapid flattening of the curve between levels of 10 and 20 ng/mL. Overall, 25OHD level at the outset of critical illness was inversely associated with non-home discharge destination (adjusted OR, 0.88; 95 % CI 0.82–0.95). When vitamin D status was dichotomized, patients with 25OHD levels <20 ng/mL had an almost 3-fold risk of a non-home discharge destination (adjusted OR, 2.74; 95 % CI 1.23–6.14) compared to patients with 25OHD levels ≥20 ng/mL.ConclusionsOur results suggest that vitamin D status may be a modifiable risk factor for non-home discharge destination in surgical ICU patients. Future randomized, controlled trials are needed to determine whether vitamin D supplementation in surgical ICU patients can improve clinical outcomes such as the successful rate of discharge to home after critical illness

Highlights

  • Discharge destination after critical illness is increasingly recognized as a valuable patient-centered outcome

  • The goal of our study was to investigate whether vitamin D status on admission to the intensive care unit (ICU) is associated with discharge destination in critically ill surgical patients

  • Since we considered discharge destination as a dichotomous variable, logistic regression analysis was used to model the relationship between plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) levels and discharge destination, while controlling for biologically plausible covariates

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Summary

Introduction

Discharge destination after critical illness is increasingly recognized as a valuable patient-centered outcome. Vitamin D status has been shown to be associated with important outcomes such as length of stay (LOS) and mortality in intensive care unit (ICU) patients. 5–10 % of ICU patients transition to chronic critical illness, with estimates of between 100,000 and 250,000 such patients in the United States at any given point in time [5,6,7,8]. These chronically critically ill patients continue to depend on myriad intensive care. Discharge destination is a potential early indicator of disability-free survival [11,12,13], and the ability to predict or identify modifiable risk factors for discharge destination may improve patient-centered health outcomes

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