Authors
- Dunn, Heather PhD, ARNP, ACNP-BC
- Balas, Michele C. PhD, RN, CCRN-K, FCCM, FAAN
- Hetland, Breanna PhD, RN, CCRN-K
- Krupp, Anna PhD, MSHP, RN
Abstract
Abstract: Post-intensive care syndrome is a costly and complicated collection of physical, cognitive, and mental health problems experienced by survivors of critical illness. The primary care NP is uniquely positioned to assess, monitor, manage, and treat patients with this syndrome following hospital discharge.
Article Content
More than a decade before the COVID-19 pandemic began, advances in critical care technology, the development of safe and effective evidence-based interventions, and a focus on interprofessional team-based care led to substantial improvements in ICU survival rates. During this same period, it was recognized that for some, surviving an ICU stay is associated with a heavy personal and financial cost. An expanding body of critical care literature has established that many ICU survivors experience profound impairments in their physical, cognitive, and mental health which can persist long after hospital discharge. Collectively, these impairments are known as post-intensive care syndrome (PICS). It is critical that outpatient healthcare providers caring for patients after ICU discharge are aware of the frequency and magnitude of PICS. This article aims to review the clinical manifestations, diagnostic evaluation, and approach to management of PICS for the primary care NP (PCNP). While PICS also affects family members and pediatric ICU survivors, the scope of this article is limited to critically ill adults.
History of PICS
In 2010, an international panel of experts gathered at a Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) stakeholder conference to discuss post-intensive care survivorship. Nomenclature was identified as a priority, and through their collaborative efforts, the PICS term was developed and defined. PICS is a collection of "new or worsening impairments in physical, cognitive, or mental health status arising after critical illness and persisting beyond acute care hospitalization."1 More recently, PICS has been expanded to include delayed or failed social reintegration following critical care hospitalization as an additional defining attribute.2 (See Post-intensive care syndrome.)
Incidence and risk factors for PICS
While some patients survive critical illness without long-term sequalae, the published literature indicates that these patients indeed represent the minority. Marra et al. reported that 64% of ICU survivors experienced at least one PICS impairment at 3 months, and 56% had persistent symptoms at 12 months.3 The social and financial consequences of persistent PICS impairments can be devastating. One-third of survivors will not return to their previous employment 60 months after critical illness.4
A wide variety of risk factors for PICS development have been identified (see PICS risk factors and Risk factors warranting PICS screening from the SCCM's International Consensus Conference on Prediction and Identification of Long-Term Impairments After Critical Illness). A recent meta-analysis identified 60 individual PICS risk factors, with pooled results indicating older age, female sex, previous mental health diagnosis, high disease severity, a negative ICU experience, and delirium while in the ICU as significant risk factors.5
Clinical manifestations
The clinical manifestations associated with PICS are organized into three distinct categories of impairment: physical, cognitive, and mental health. Co-occurrence of impairments in two or more domains is common among survivors.3,6
Physical impairments. Physical impairments associated with PICS include weight loss, proximal weakness, loss of muscle bulk, and fatigue and are primarily associated with pulmonary and neuromuscular system abnormalities.7 The understanding behind the pulmonary impairments associated with severe critical illness is based on early work with survivors of acute respiratory distress syndrome who required mechanical ventilation during ICU admission. Patients demonstrated severe pulmonary function abnormalities at extubation, followed by substantial improvement but continued abnormality at 6 months.8 Pulmonary function can return to near normal by year 3.7
Critical illness neuromuscular abnormalities contribute to physical impairments observed in ICU survivors. Critical illness neuromuscular abnormality is delineated by subtypes of dysfunction including critical illness polyneuropathy, affecting the motor and sensory axons, and critical illness myopathy, resulting from myofilament loss and muscle fiber apoptosis.9 Peripheral nerve and muscle derangements frequently coexist in a spectrum of critical illness neuromuscular abnormalities acquired in the ICU.9 The incidence of critical illness neuromuscular abnormalities varies widely by individual study but has been reported via systematic review to be 46%.9,10 Impaired physical function resulting from neuromuscular dysfunction acquired in the ICU can lead to diminished functional status, disability in activities of daily living, and altered quality of life for months to years after the acute period and is known to predict discharge to another facility (not home) and postdischarge mortality.11,12
Cognitive dysfunction. The landmark Bringing to Light the Risk Factors and Incidence of Neuropsychological Dysfunction in ICU Survivors (BRAIN-ICU) study assessed global cognition and executive function of 821 ICU survivors at 3- and 12-months post-ICU discharge.13 ICU delirium affected 74% of the patients during their hospital stay. Three months posthospital discharge, 40% of the surviving patients had global cognition scores worse than those typically seen in moderate traumatic brain injury, and 26% had scores similar to patients with mild Alzheimer disease. At 12 months, scores were essentially unchanged.
Mental health impairments. Given the physical and cognitive impairments associated with critical care survivorship, impacts on mental health are not surprising. Forty-one percent of ICU survivors from across the United Kingdom who participated in a multicenter, longitudinal mental health study reported persistent depressive symptoms at 3 months, largely unchanged at 12 months.14 Patients with symptoms of depression were 47% more likely to die during the first 2 years after discharge than those without.14 Memories of delusional events and stress reactions during hospitalization are risk factors associated with anxiety symptoms.15 Prevalence rates of anxiety range from 32% to 40%, which is known to persist up to one year after discharge.15
Post-ICU depressive symptoms and anxiety strongly correlate with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in ICU survivors.15 Recent meta-analysis results indicate that one out of every five adult ICU survivors will develop PTSD in the year following ICU discharge, comparable to PTSD rates of civilian survivors of conflicts of war.16 The development of PTSD among ICU survivors has been reported to be delayed by as long as a year.17 In the US alone, 5.7 million patients are admitted annually to ICUs. Allowing for 10%-29% mortality, the results of this meta-analysis indicate that approximately 1 million patients annually will develop PTSD following ICU admission.
Diagnostic evaluation
There is no consensus on the instruments for the evaluation and diagnosis of PICS. A 2017 literature review concluded that there was insufficient evidence to support any measure of physical, cognitive, mental health, or quality-of-life outcomes in adult ICU survivors.18 In response, clinical experts developed a two-step set of expert-validated PICS outcome instruments.19 Assessment is divided into two steps: an initial screening, followed by a comprehensive assessment if indicated. Initial screening is appropriate for application by a range of healthcare professionals in the outpatient setting and consists of five brief tests, available free-of-charge, covering the three clinical domains of PICS. Comprehensive assessment is intended to be used by PICS experts if there are concerning findings on the initial screening.
Collectively, initial screening takes approximately 20 minutes per patient to complete.19 Face-to-face time could be shortened by requesting that the mental health (Patient Health Questionnaire-4 [PHQ-4]) and the health-related quality-of-life scales (EQ-5D-5L) be completed prior to the appointment time, saving in-person exam time for the physical function and cognitive assessments. If additional or expanded testing is added to the battery of screening assessments, this will increase the duration of time needed to complete an expanded screening assessment.
Physical impairment assessment. Physical function is assessed with a Timed Up-and-Go (TUG) test and measured handgrip strength. The TUG test quantifies functional mobility and requires a patient to rise from an armchair, walk 3 meters, pivot, and return to a seated position in the chair.20 The score given is the time taken in seconds to complete all tasks, with those completing all tasks in 20 seconds or less classified as independent. Handgrip strength is a quantitative measure of the muscle strength of the hand and forearm, measured via a dynamometer, and is known to predict declines in cognition, mobility, functional status, and mortality in community-dwelling older adults.21
If there are concerning findings on the TUG test or handgrip dynamometer, the Lawton Instrumental Activities of Daily Living Scale is an alternative physical function screening assessment that can be considered for extended evaluation. The Lawton Scale covers eight different activities instrumental to independent function and is thought to be more sensitive to complex skills necessary for community living versus an instrument focused on activities of daily living only.22 The Lawton Scale takes 10 to 15 minutes to complete, and can be administered via interview or given as a questionnaire.22
Cognitive dysfunction assessment. Cognition can be assessed with the Mini-Cog(C) and the animal naming test. The Mini-Cog(C) takes approximately 3 minutes to administer, has minimal language content, comes in multiple languages, and consists of a 3-item recall and a clock drawing component.23 The animal naming test, initially developed as a screening tool for hepatic encephalopathy, involves verbally naming as many animals as possible in 1 minute.24 Among healthy control subjects, the ability to name less than 15 animals in 1 minute is an abnormal result and an indication of cognitive impairment.24
The SCCM recommends the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA)(C).25 Available in several versions and languages, the MoCA(C) tests short-term memory, visuospatial ability, executive function, attention, concentration, working memory, language, and orientation to time and place.26 Full MoCA(C) testing takes 10 minutes to administer and requires completion of a paid training and certification course to be able to administer, interpret, and score the results.26
Mental health assessment. Mental health is screened via the Patient Health Questionnaire-4 (PHQ-4), a four-item scale designed to screen for symptoms of anxiety and depression.27 Respondents are asked to rank how often they have been bothered by nervousness, worry, loss of interest, and feelings of depression or hopelessness during the preceding 2 weeks.
The SCCM recommends the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) for detection of anxiety and depression among critical care survivors.25 The HADS is slightly longer at 14 items (7 items each for depression and anxiety) and requires approximately 2 to 5 minutes to complete.28 It can be used as an alternative to the PHQ-4, or it can be completed as an additional screening if there are concerning findings on initial screening.
The EuroQol-5D-5L is the recommended health-related quality-of-life assessment.19,25 Designed for self-completion, respondents rate their health on five-point scales for five dimensions: mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain and discomfort, and anxiety and depression and rate their overall health on a visual analogue scale (0-100).29 It has been translated into multiple languages, and population norms are available across a wide range of languages and cultures.
PTSD assessment. While not an official component of the basic screening, PTSD symptom assessment is recommended by the SCCM.19,25 Multiple PTSD screening tools exist. Recommended by the SCCM, the Impact of Event Scale-Revised (IES-R) is a 22-item self-report questionnaire measuring subjective distress following traumatic events.30 Other screening assessments exist including the 5-item Primary Care PTSD Screen for DSM-5, developed by the US Department of Veterans Affairs specifically for use in primary care and freely available in the public domain.31
Approach to management
During hospital stay. The ICU Liberation bundle, also known as the A through F (or ABCDEF) bundle, is an evidence-based approach to ICU care to optimize patient recovery and outcomes. Complete and consistent application of all elements of the bundle is associated with improved ICU and hospital outcomes.32 Efforts to reduce healthcare worker and civilian exposure to COVID-19 during the pandemic have had a detrimental effect on ABDCEF bundle application, particularly regarding early mobility and family-centered care.33 Bundle-restricted critical care, combined with increased COVID-19 survival rates, has created a concern of a burgeoning PICS pandemic as the COVID-19 crisis continues.34
ICU aftercare programs. Standard care following critical illness was traditionally provided in a siloed approach with physical and cognitive impairments addressed individually as indicated. Hospital-based and home-based physical rehabilitation programs were of mixed success in achieving meaningful improvements in physical function or health-related quality of life following critical care survival.35,36 Combined rehabilitation programs, targeting physical and cognitive impairments associated with survival following critical illness, are more promising and provided the foundation for the modern ICU aftercare approach.37 Based on models developed in the United Kingdom and located primarily at large academic medical centers, ICU aftercare programs are outpatient-based, multidisciplinary care teams that coordinate post-ICU health assessment, treatment, and referral to care specialists to promote and optimize recovery following critical illness.38 Postdischarge care following a hospitalization that includes an ICU stay is not currently standardized, and multiple models of care exist.39 Formal ICU aftercare programs remain limited in number and geographic location, impacting access, particularly for those living in rural locations or who are discharged to a care facility rather than home.40,41
Implications for the PCNP
PCNPs are trained and educated to autonomously deliver longitudinal care for patients with stable, chronic conditions and organize targeted specialty management.42 Patients who survive critical illness and are experiencing any of the associated PICS impairments require long-term coordinated management of the necessary care to support recovery for symptoms that often persist for months to years.3 All patients who present to their primary care provider for a follow-up visit after a hospitalization that included an ICU stay should be screened for signs and symptoms of PICS using established screening tools. A positive screen on any individual tool should trigger a referral to an appropriate specialist. The SCCM recommends specialist referral targeted toward specific symptoms (see PICS screening and management interventions).43 Additional interventions to consider at follow-up are numerous and individualized to the specific patient and can include smoking cessation counseling and treatment, assessment of the need for durable medical equipment, medication reconciliation, dysphagia assessment, and fitness to drive a motor vehicle assessment.38,40,44
Family caregivers want to be involved in ICU patient care during critical care hospitalizations and expect to continue to be involved as care transitions from the hospital to home.45 Family caregivers should be included in all posthospital follow-up visits and considered an integral member of the care team.
As the COVID-19 pandemic progresses and survival rates continue to improve, the burden of care is shifting from the ICU to the outpatient setting. It is imperative that PCNPs familiarize themselves with PICS so they can effectively screen for and properly care for patients who present following a critical care hospitalization.
Frequency and duration of visits. The optimal interval from hospital discharge until the first outpatient clinic visits is not well established, as data on the topic are limited.39 The SCCM recommends that initial posthospital assessment occur 2 to 4 weeks following discharge.25 The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence based in the United Kingdom recommends assessment prior to hospital discharge and again in 2 to 3 months.46 Of note, the timing of initial posthospital visits can be complicated by patient-level issues that limit the ability to travel, including discharge to a care facility or rurality.41
Waiting 30 or more days following hospital discharge can limit the ability to screen for PICS symptoms that were potentially unrecognized at the time of hospital discharge and require urgent intervention to prevent further decline, potentially increasing the risk of deterioration and hospital readmission. For this reason, critical care survivors should be evaluated in the outpatient setting at the earliest opportunity.
A recently conducted national survey by the Critical and Acute Illness Recovery Organization (CAIRO) Post-ICU Clinic Collaborative found a wide range of visit duration lengths in ICU aftercare programs, from 31-60 minutes to greater than 2 hours.40 The initial posthospital outpatient visit requires extensive assessment and exam by the PCNP, with recommended screening alone requiring a minimum of 20 minutes to complete.19 Therefore, lengthier visit duration, in excess of the standard 15-minute return visit, is necessary.
The frequency of return visits is also not well established. The SCCM Consensus Statement recommended "serial" assessments of unclear duration.25 Mayer et al. suggest an outpatient visit frequency following initial evaluation of 1-, 3-, 6-, and 12-month postdischarge.41 Outpatient visit frequency should be individualized based on the patient's needs and continue until realization of full recovery.
Future directions
Demand for ICU aftercare services has surged in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.47 The limited number of available formal ICU aftercare programs in the US cannot meet the demand for these services. Moving forward with limited resources and addressing gaps in care is challenging. Primary care involvement in ICU aftercare is not only necessary, but appropriate, to help fill this gap and coordinate care across multiple disciplines.48 PCNPs have unique training and experience that enables them to excel in the patient management and care coordination necessary for this complex patient population. ICU aftercare is time-intensive, and PCNP success in providing these services will require that they function with full-practice authority and reimbursement parity. PCNPs should continue to advocate for full-practice authority and elimination of incident to billing to increase the feasibility of providing care for this growing and often underserved population.
Conclusion
As survival from critical illness continues to improve, post-intensive care sequelae and complications will become more prevalent. Current models of ICU aftercare lack standardization and cannot meet the demand for PICS services and rehabilitation secondary to a variety of system- and patient-level variables. PCNPs are, by virtue of educational training and clinical background, qualified to help fill the ICU aftercare gap and provide high-level ICU aftercare for survivors of critical illness.
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