Intensive Care for Cancer Patients: Progress and Challenges
Author Information
Author(s): Azoulay Elie, Soares Marcio, Darmon Michael, Benoit Dominique, Pastores Stephen, Afessa Bekele
Primary Institution: AP-HP, Hôpital Saint-Louis, Medical ICU, Paris, France
Hypothesis
Can intensive care support improve survival rates in critically ill cancer patients?
Conclusion
Survival rates for critically ill cancer patients have improved due to better management and selection criteria.
Supporting Evidence
- Recent data show improved survival rates in cancer patients requiring ICU support.
- Advances in cancer treatment and ICU management have contributed to better outcomes.
- Early ICU admission is associated with improved survival in critically ill cancer patients.
Takeaway
Doctors are getting better at helping cancer patients in the ICU, which means more of them are surviving serious illnesses.
Methodology
This is a consensus opinion based on expert reviews and recent studies.
Potential Biases
Selection bias may occur due to varying criteria for ICU admission among oncologists.
Limitations
Most studies are retrospective and single-centered, leading to potential biases.
Participant Demographics
The review discusses critically ill patients with various types of cancer.
Statistical Information
Confidence Interval
95% confidence interval for cancer incidence rate is 533.8 (532.6-535.1) per 100,000 population.
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
Want to read the original?
Access the complete publication on the publisher's website