Early physical rehabilitation dosage in the IntensiveCare Unit predicts hospital outcomes after criticalCOVID-19.

Journal: Research Square
Published:
Abstract

to examine the relationship between physical rehabilitation parameters including a novel approach to quantifying dosage with hospital outcomes for patients with critical COVID-19. Retrospective practice analysis from March 5, 2020, to April 15, 2021. Intensive care units (ICU) at four medical institutions. n = 3,780 adults with ICU admission and diagnosis of COVID-19. We measured the physical rehabilitation treatment delivered in ICU and patient outcomes: 1) mortality; 2) discharge disposition; and 3) physical function at hospital discharge measured by the Activity Measure-Post Acute Care (AM-PAC) "6-Clicks" (6-24, 24=greater functional independence). Physical rehabilitation dosage was defined as the average mobility level scores in the first three sessions (a surrogate measure of intensity) multiplied by the rehabilitation frequency (PT + OT frequency in hospital). The cohort was a mean 64 ± 16 years old, 41% female, mean BMI of 32 ± 9 kg/m2 and 46% (n=1739) required mechanical ventilation. For 2191 patients with complete data, rehabilitation dosage and AM-PAC at discharge were moderately, positively associated (Spearman's rho [r] = 0.484, p < 0.001). Multivariate linear regression (model adjusted R2= 0.68, p <0.001) demonstrates mechanical ventilation (β = -0.86, p = 0.001), average mobility score in first three sessions (β = 2.6, p <0.001) and physical rehabilitation dosage (β = 0.22, p = 0.001) were predictive of AM-PAC scores at discharge when controlling for age, sex, BMI, and ICU LOS. Greater physical rehabilitation exposure early in the ICU is associated with physical function at hospital discharge.

Authors
Kirby Mayer, Evan Haezebrouck, Lori Ginoza, Clarisa Martinez, Minnie Jan, Lori Michener, Lindsey Fresenko, Ashley Montgomery Yates, Anna Kalema, Amy Pastva, Michelle Biehl, Matthew Mart, Joshua Johnson