4.7 Article

Identification of Distinct Clinical Phenotypes of Heterogeneous Mechanically Ventilated ICU Patients Using Cluster Analysis

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm12041499

Keywords

mechanical ventilation; cluster analysis; clinical phenotypes; critical care

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This retrospective study aimed to predict the outcomes of ventilated ICU patients on the first day of ventilation by deriving their clinical phenotypes. Cluster analysis was performed on the eICU and MIMIC-IV cohorts to identify and validate four clinical phenotypes. These phenotypes showed heterogeneity among ICU patients and were associated with different mortality and extubation success rates. They also responded differently to ventilation strategies in terms of treatment duration, but did not have a difference in mortality.
This retrospective study aimed to derive the clinical phenotypes of ventilated ICU patients to predict the outcomes on the first day of ventilation. Clinical phenotypes were derived from the eICU Collaborative Research Database (eICU) cohort via cluster analysis and were validated in the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care (MIMIC-IV) cohort. Four clinical phenotypes were identified and compared in the eICU cohort (n = 15,256). Phenotype A (n = 3112) was associated with respiratory disease, had the lowest 28-day mortality (16%), and had a high extubation success rate (similar to 80%). Phenotype B (n = 3335) was correlated with cardiovascular disease, had the second-highest 28-day mortality (28%), and had the lowest extubation success rate (69%). Phenotype C (n = 3868) was correlated with renal dysfunction, had the highest 28-day mortality (28%), and had the second-lowest extubation success rate (74%). Phenotype D (n = 4941) was associated with neurological and traumatic diseases, had the second-lowest 28-day mortality (22%), and had the highest extubation success rate (>80%). These findings were validated in the validation cohort (n = 10,813). Additionally, these phenotypes responded differently to ventilation strategies in terms of duration of treatment, but had no difference in mortality. The four clinical phenotypes unveiled the heterogeneity of ICU patients and helped to predict the 28-day mortality and the extubation success rate.

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