Abstract
To clarify the relationship between mobility disability at the time of discharge from the ICU and clinical factors evaluated at ICU admission in septic patients. DESIGN: A single-center, retrospective, observational study. SETTING: Ten-bed, the emergency and medical ICU. PATIENTS: We analyzed the data of septic patients who were admitted to our ICU between September 2012 and September 2016 and received early rehabilitation. INTERVENTIONS: None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: The patients were categorized into two groups based on their scores on the ICU mobility scale at the time of discharge from the ICU: the mobility disability group (ICU mobility scale score < 9) and the no mobility disability group (ICU mobility scale score ≥ 9). Of the 110 eligible patients, 63 met the inclusion criteria; of these, 46 patients (73%) were classified into the mobility disability group, and 17 patients (27%) were classified into the no mobility disability group. The age (median, 72 vs 64 yr; p = 0.024), prevalence of patients with clinical frailty scale scores of greater than or equal to 5 (54% vs 12%; p = 0.003), Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score (median, 9.0 vs 6.0; p = 0.006) and rate of vasopressin use (26% vs 0%; p = 0.026) were significantly higher in the mobility disability group as compared with the no mobility disability group. Among the candidate variables for which values recorded before/at the time of ICU admission were available, the clinical frailty scale score was identified as the only independent, statistically significant predictor of mobility disability at ICU discharge (odds ratio, 7.77; 95% CI, 1.37-44.21; p = 0.021). The positive predictive value and negative predictive value of clinical frailty scale scores greater than or equal to 5 for mobility disability at ICU discharge were 92.6% and 41.7%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The clinical frailty scale score was associated with increased mobility disability at ICU discharge in septic patients receiving early rehabilitation.