Analysis of Causes and Risk Factors for Deaths Among Pediatric Oncology Patients: A 20-Year Observation.
Despite major therapeutic advances, mortality among children with cancer remains a significant clinical problem, particularly treatment-related mortality (TRM). The aim of this study was to analyze causes of death and identify mortality risk factors in pediatric oncology patients. A retrospective single-center study was conducted in patients hospitalized for oncological diseases between 2004 and 2024. Seventy deceased patients were identified. A matched control group of survivors (n=70), adjusted for sex, age, and diagnosis, was included. Demographic, clinical, and laboratory data were analyzed using univariate and multivariate logistic regression. During the study period, 70 children died in hospital. Most were boys (61.4%), with a median age of 130 months. Hematological malignancies accounted for 64.3% of diagnoses. The leading cause of death was disease progression (69.6%), followed by TRM (31.4%), including infection-related mortality (IRM). Independent predictors of death were older age (OR=1.083, 95% CI: 1.006-1.166) and lower platelet count at diagnosis (OR=0.623, 95% CI: 0.456-0.851). Post-hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) status was an independent predictor of infectious death (OR=4.04, 95% CI: 1.04-15.61). Mortality in pediatric oncology remains clinically relevant, with a substantial proportion attributable to potentially preventable treatment-related causes. Early risk stratification and intensified supportive care are particularly important in older patients, those with thrombocytopenia, and post-HSCT patients.
- Research Article
9
- 10.1038/s41598-021-99613-1
- Oct 13, 2021
- Scientific Reports
Reduced ventricular longitudinal shortening measured by atrioventricular plane displacement (AVPD) and global longitudinal strain (GLS) are prognostic markers in heart disease. This study aims to determine if AVPD and GLS with cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) are independent predictors of cardiovascular (CV) and all-cause death also in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). Patients (n = 287) were examined with CMR and AVPD, GLS, ventricular volumes, myocardial fibrosis/scar were measured. Follow-up was 5 years with cause of death retrieved from a national registry. Forty CV and 60 all-cause deaths occurred and CV non-survivors had a lower AVPD (6.4 ± 2.0 vs 8.0 ± 2.4 mm, p < 0.001) and worse GLS (− 6.1 ± 2.2 vs − 7.7 ± 3.1%, p = 0.001). Kaplan–Meier analyses displayed increased survival for patients in the highest AVPD- and GLS-tertiles vs. the lowest tertiles (AVPD: p = 0.001, GLS: p = 0.013). AVPD and GLS showed in univariate analysis a hazard ratio (HR) of 1.30 (per-mm-decrease) and 1.19 (per-%-decrease) for CV death. Mean AVPD and GLS were independent predictors of all-cause death (HR = 1.24 per-mm-decrease and 1.15 per-%-decrease), but only AVPD showed incremental value over age, sex, body-mass-index, EF, etiology and fibrosis/scar for CV death (HR = 1.33 per-mm-decrease, p < 0.001). Ventricular longitudinal shortening remains independently prognostic for death in HFrEF even after adjusting for well-known clinical risk factors.
- Research Article
24
- 10.1016/s0002-8703(03)00429-0
- Nov 1, 2003
- American Heart Journal
Death in patients with permanent pacemakers for sick sinus syndrome
- Research Article
216
- 10.1016/j.ahj.2004.01.026
- Sep 1, 2004
- American Heart Journal
Prognostic significance of raised plasma levels of interleukin-6 and C-reactive protein in atrial fibrillation
- Research Article
153
- 10.1161/01.cir.93.4.753
- Feb 15, 1996
- Circulation
Some patients with an automatic implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) suffer multiple appropriate, consecutive, high-energy discharges (MCDs) during follow-up. Such events might represent resistant ventricular arrhythmias and might have prognostic significance. Eighty consecutive patients with an ICD were followed up for up to 82 months (mean, 21 +/- 19 months). Thirty-eight patients had survived an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and 42 had recurrent ventricular tachycardia. During follow-up, 16 patients had MCD (group A), 26 patients had episodes of single appropriate discharges (group B), and 38 patients had no appropriate discharges (group C). Group A patients had worse functional status (P = .001), lower left ventricular ejection fractions (LVEFs) (P = .001), and lower survival rates (log rank, P = .003) than the remaining two groups of patients. Cox analysis showed LVEF (P = .001) to be an independent predictor of MCD. Independent predictors of death or heart transplant were MCD (P = .001), female sex (P = .001), age (P = .001), history of cardiac arrest (P = .003), and functional status (P = .003). The only independent predictor of total mortality was female sex (P = .002). Independent predictors of cardiac death were MCD (P = .007) and female sex (P = .018). Independent predictors of arrhythmic death were age (P = .001), female sex (P = .02), and MCD (P = .023). In patients with an ICD, the development of MCD is an independent predictor of cardiac and arrhythmic mortality. If this finding is confirmed in larger studies, it may help to identify patients in whom other therapeutic alternatives, ie, heart transplantation, should be considered during follow-up after ICD implantation.
- Research Article
172
- 10.1016/s0741-5214(96)70077-0
- Oct 1, 1996
- Journal of Vascular Surgery
Predictors of death in nonruptured and ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms.
- Research Article
- 10.3390/jpm16040212
- Apr 12, 2026
- Journal of personalized medicine
Background/Objectives: Abnormalities in the partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PCO2) can occur during respiratory support and may contribute to adverse neonatal outcomes. This study aimed to assess the incidence of early hypocapnia and hypercapnia in mechanically ventilated preterm infants and their major associated outcomes. Methods: A single-center retrospective cohort study (2017-2024) was conducted in preterm infants < 32 weeks' gestation who required > 24 h of invasive ventilation within the first 3 days of life. Perinatal-neonatal data were retrieved from the medical database. Admission blood gas values (arterial and capillary-venous) and the maximum and minimum PCO2 in the first 72 h were evaluated. Normocapnia was defined as PCO2 35-45 mmHg, hypocapnia as < 35 mmHg, and hypercapnia as > 45 mmHg. Primary outcomes were the incidence of PCO2 abnormalities; secondary outcomes included death or severe brain injury (SBI), SBI alone, and bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) among survivors. Logistic regression identified independent predictors of the secondary outcomes. Results: Among the 134 infants evaluated, most experienced both hypercapnia and hypocapnia. Hypercapnia occurred in 81.3% of infants, and hypocapnia in 93.2%. Death or SBI was observed in 51.5%, and SBI alone in 42.5%. Gestational age < 28 weeks, air-leak syndromes, and pulmonary hemorrhage were independent predictors of death or SBI. Among survivors, hypercapnia and gestational age < 28 weeks independently predicted BPD. Infants with adverse outcomes had higher maximum PCO2 values and greater PCO2 variability, although these were not independent predictors of SBI or death. Conclusions: PCO2 instability is highly prevalent in ventilated preterm infants, underscoring the need for individualized ventilation strategies. Extreme prematurity emerged as the primary risk factor for adverse outcomes, while hypercapnia was independently associated with BPD.
- Research Article
29
- 10.1016/j.ejim.2019.12.016
- Jan 16, 2020
- European Journal of Internal Medicine
Mortality in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage associated with antiplatelet agents, oral anticoagulants or no antithrombotic therapy
- Research Article
2
- 10.1007/s10840-021-01017-8
- Jul 1, 2021
- Journal of interventional cardiac electrophysiology : an international journal of arrhythmias and pacing
The implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) is the therapy of choice for the prevention of sudden cardiac death. The number of elderly patients receiving ICDs is increasing. This study aimed to assess the outcome of patients according to their age at the time of implantation, and to identify variables potentially associated with patient survival. Between June 2009 and December 2019, we retrospectively enrolled all consecutive patients in whom ICD implantation had been performed for primary or secondary prevention at our center. During the study period, 670 patients underwent ICD implantation. We stratified the population into four age-classes: Class 1 (23%) (pts aged less than 60years), Class 2 (28%) (pts aged between 60 and 70years), Class 3 (39%) (pts aged between 70 and 80years) and Class 4 (9%) (pts aged 80years or older). Over a median follow-up of 42months, the rate of deaths in Class 4 was higher than in Classes 1 and 2 (log-rank test, P < 0.01), but was comparable to that in Class 3 (P = 0.407). With increasing age, we observed more complications at the time of implantation and during follow-up. On multivariate analysis, higher NYHA class, creatinine level and CHA2DS2-VASc score were identified as independent predictors of death, while age was not associated with worse prognosis. Higher body mass index, higher NYHA class and CHA2DS2-VASc score were also confirmed as independent predictors of hospitalizations or death due to any cause. This study showed good survival in ICD patients in all age-groups, including those aged ≥80years. The CHA2DS2-VASc score seems to be a stronger predictor of death than age.
- Research Article
475
- 10.1007/bf00405009
- May 1, 1991
- Diabetologia
The Paris Prospective Study is a long-term, large-scale study of the factors predicting coronary heart disease. The first follow-up examination included, for subjects not known as having diabetes mellitus, a 75 g oral glucose tolerance test with measurement of plasma insulin and glucose levels, fasting and 2 h post-load. Between 1968 and 1973, 6903 men aged 43-54 years were thus examined. Causes of death were ascertained within this group after 15 years of mean follow-up. The baseline variables were tested as predictors of death from coronary heart disease by a Cox regression analysis. Significant independent predictors of coronary heart disease death were: systolic blood pressure, number of cigarettes per day, plasma cholesterol level, and 2 h post-load plasma insulin level when entered as a categorical variable (below or above 452 pmol/l. i.e. the lower limit of the fifth quintile of the distribution). This dichotomization was performed to account for the non-linear univariate distribution of deaths with increasing post-load insulin values. Fasting plasma insulin level was not an independent predictor of death by coronary heart disease over this long-term follow-up. Levels of blood glucose were not significant independent predictors of death by coronary heart disease when plasma insulin levels were included in the model. The same applied to abnormalities of glucose tolerance when the 125 men with known non-insulin-treated diabetes at baseline were added to the group. Under the assumption that hyperinsulinaemia is a marker of insulin resistance, the results are consistent with the hypothesis that insulin resistance is associated with a higher risk of coronary heart disease mortality. However, it is doubtful that circulating insulin per se is a direct cause of arterial complications.
- Research Article
78
- 10.1017/s1047951105001824
- Nov 18, 2005
- Cardiology in the Young
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is a common cause of sudden death in children. In this study, we aimed to identify clinical measures for stratification of this risk in childhood. By means of a retrospective cohort study from six regional centres of paediatric cardiology, we identified 128 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy presenting below 19 years of age, with a mean follow-up of 10.8 years. Of the patients, 31 had died, 16 suddenly, with a median age at sudden death of 13.3 years. Cox regression shows that electrocardiographic voltages, analysed as the sum of the R and S waves in all six limb leads (p equal to 0.001), and septal thickness expressed as proportion of the 95th centile for age (p equal to 0.036), were independent predictors of sudden death. When the sum of the R and S waves is over 10 millivolts, the odds ratio for sudden death was 8.4, with 95% confidence intervals from 2.2 to 33.7 (p equal to 0.0012), and finding a septal thickness over 190% of 95th centile for age gives an odds ratio of 6.2, with confidence intervals from 1.5 to 25.1 (p equal to 0.011). Noonan's syndrome, with a p value equal to 0.043, and the ratio of the left ventricular wall to its cavity in diastole, with a p value equal to 0.005, were independent predictors of death in cardiac failure, with a ratio of the mural thickness to the dimension of the cavity over 0.30 giving an odds ratio of 36.0, with confidence limits from 4.2 to 311, and a p value equal to 0.00009. At follow-up, patients deemed to be at a high risk of dying suddenly were identified by the combination of the sum of the R and S waves greater than 10 millivolts and septal thickness over 190%, with a sensitivity of 91%, specificity of 78%, positive predictive value of 50%, and a negative predictive value of 97%. Children at high risk of dying suddenly with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, with a subsequent annual mortality of 6.6%, can be distinguished at the time of diagnosis from those patients having a low risk of sudden death, the latter with an annual mortality of 0.27%.
- Research Article
504
- 10.1161/01.str.0000173152.84438.1c
- Jul 7, 2005
- Stroke
The causes of death of patients with cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) have not been systematically addressed in previous studies. We aimed to analyze the causes and predictors of death during the acute phase of CVT in the International Study on Cerebral Vein and Dural Sinus Thrombosis (ISCVT) to identify preventable or treatable causes. ISCVT is a multinational, prospective, observational study including 624 patients with CVT occurring between May 1998 and May 2001, in which 27 patients (4.3%) died during the acute phase, 21 (3.4%) within 30 days from symptom onset. Inclusion forms and a questionnaire assessing the causes of death were analyzed. A logistic regression analysis was performed to identify the predictors of death within 30 days from symptom onset of CVT. Median time between onset of symptoms and death was 13 days and between diagnosis and death, 5 days. Causes of death were mainly transtentorial herniation due to a unilateral focal mass effect (10 patients) or to diffuse edema and multiple parenchymal lesions (10 patients). Independent predictors of death were coma (odds ratio [OR], 8.8; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.8 to 27.7), mental disturbance (OR, 2.5; 95% CI 0.9 to 7.3), deep CVT thrombosis (OR, 8.5; 95% CI, 2.6 to 27.8), right intracerebral hemorrhage (OR, 3.4; 95% CI, 1.1 to 10.6), and posterior fossa lesion (OR, 6.5; 95% CI, 1.3 to 31.7). Worsening of previous focal or de novo focal deficits increased the risk of death. The main causes of acute death were neurologic, the most frequent mechanism being transtentorial herniation.
- Research Article
25
- 10.2169/internalmedicine.54.3744
- Jan 1, 2015
- Internal Medicine
The burden of candidemia is shifting from intensive care units (ICU) to non-ICU settings. This study aimed to define the differences in epidemiology and predictors of death between ICU-acquired candidemia (ICUAC) and non-ICUAC. We conducted a retrospective study of 80 patients with ICUAC and 147 patients with non-IUCAC at five hospitals. The distribution of Candida species and resistance to antifungal agents did not differ between the ICUAC and non-ICUAC groups. ICUAC patients received more echinocandins and less triazoles, as well as more adequate antifungal therapy than non-ICUAC patients (all p<0.05). ICUAC patients had a significantly higher average acute physiology and chronic health evaluation (APACHE) II score (21.0±7.9 vs. 17.8±8.6; p<0.01), Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score (9.2±5.5 vs. 7.4±3.9; p<0.05) and day-90 mortality rate (52.5% vs. 36.7%; p<0.05) when compared to non-ICUAC patients. Using a multivariate logistic analysis, adequate antifungal therapy was found to be the only protective factor for death in both groups. Respiratory failure supported with invasive mechanical ventilation, renal failure supported with replacement therapy and an APACHE II score ≥20 were independent predictors of death in ICUAC patients, while age ≥60 years, concurrent bacteremia and APACHE II score ≥20 were independent predictors of death in non-ICUAC patients. The Candida species and antifungal resistance profiles in patients with ICUAC were similar to non-ICUAC patients, but led to worse outcomes. The protective and risk factors for death may therefore be relevant for the clinical management of patients with candidemia in ICU and non-ICU settings.
- Research Article
20
- 10.1016/j.avsg.2008.07.006
- Sep 6, 2008
- Annals of Vascular Surgery
Predictors of Survival Following Open and Endovascular Repair of Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms
- Research Article
- 10.1161/circheartfailure.125.013656
- Jan 6, 2026
- Circulation. Heart failure
Pregnant women with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) face high risks of complications and maternal death due to hemodynamic overload, withdrawal of teratogenic but essential therapies, and limited treatment options during pregnancy. To evaluate maternal and fetal outcomes in women with DCM during pregnancy and up to 12 months postpartum, across different etiologies, and identify predictors of maternal death. Prospective cohort of pregnant women with confirmed DCM enrolled in the InCor Pregnancy and Heart Disease Registry. All received standardized cardio-obstetric care. Left ventricular ejection fraction was assessed by echocardiography; brain natriuretic peptide was evaluated when available. Treatment during pregnancy included β-blockers, hydralazine, diuretics, nitrates, enoxaparin, and hospitalization when needed. Guideline-directed therapy was resumed postpartum. Outcomes included maternal (heart failure, arrhythmias, thromboembolism, death) and obstetric/fetal complications. Logistic regression identified predictors of maternal mortality. Among 983 registry patients (2013-2023), 90 had DCM. Causes were peripartum (32), idiopathic (21), myocarditis (15), Chagas disease (11), and others (11). Maternal complications occurred in 51.1% during pregnancy, 36.0% in the early postpartum period (up to 6 weeks after delivery), and 38.6% in the late postpartum period (from 6 weeks to 12 months after delivery). All 9 maternal deaths (10%) occurred postpartum-mostly due to heart failure-at a mean of 8.8±3.1 months. Cesarean section was performed in 75%, with 10% fetal loss and 33.8% prematurity. Mean birth weight was 2606 g. Left ventricular ejection fraction improved from 32% at diagnosis to 39% during pregnancy and 42% at 12 months. Lower left ventricular ejection fraction (odds ratio, 0.87; P=0.006) and prior thromboembolism (odds ratio, 15.5; P=0.017) were independent predictors of death. Pregnancy in women with DCM was associated with high morbidity and late mortality. Reduced left ventricular ejection fraction and a history of thromboembolism were independent predictors of maternal death.
- Research Article
45
- 10.1080/13607863.2011.609534
- Oct 14, 2011
- Aging & Mental Health
Objective: The frailty syndrome is associated with adverse clinical outcomes independently of cognitive impairment. The recent easy-to-apply Study of Osteoporotic Fractures (SOF) criteria for frailty could be useful to diagnose such syndrome also in Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients. The aim of this study was to apply these criteria among AD outpatients in order to determine: (i) the prevalence and correlates of frailty and (ii) the one-year predictors of death in this population. Method: This prospective cohort study enrolled 109 community-dwelling outpatients aged 65+ (median age 84 years) consecutively diagnosed with AD at a geriatric outpatient service in Italy in 2009. At baseline, participants underwent a comprehensive geriatric assessment including the evaluation of frailty status by means of the SOF criteria. Multiple logistic regression analysis was performed to find correlates of frailty. At a one-year follow-up, data on mortality were available for 95 participants and predictors of death were evaluated by means of multiple logistic regression analysis. Results: Most participants had mild (52%) or moderate (29%) dementia. Frailty status was defined for all subjects at baseline: 25 (22%) were robust, 30 (28%) pre-frail and 54 (50%) frail. Independent correlates of frailty were age and dependence in the basic activities of daily living, and in particular in dressing. One year after enrolment, frailty was an independent predictor of death (odds ratio 11.27, 95% confidence interval 1.64–77.72, p = 0.014) after correction for age, sex, dependence in the basic activities of daily living, severity of cognitive impairment and comorbidity. Conclusion: Frailty status was diagnosed according to the SOF criteria in all AD outpatients and it was an independent one-year predictor of death. In order to provide them with appropriate prognostic evaluation and therapeutic advice all AD outpatients, especially those with specific disabilities, could be screened by means of the SOF criteria for frailty.