A Covid-19 outbreak developed in Lombardy, Veneto and Emilia-Romagna (Italy) at the end of February 2020. Fear of an imminent saturation of available ICU beds generated the notion that rationing of intensive care resources could have been necessary.
In order to evaluate the impact of Covid-19 on the ICU capacity to manage critically ill patients, we performed a retrospective analysis of the first 2 weeks of the outbreak (February 24-March 8). Data were collected from regional registries and from a case report form sent to participating sites. ICU beds increased from 1545 to 1989 (28.7%), and patients receiving respiratory support outside the ICU increased from 4 (0.6%) to 260 (37.0%). Patients receiving respiratory support outside the ICU were significantly older [65 vs. 77 years], had more cerebrovascular (5.8 vs. 13.1%) and renal (5.3 vs. 10.0%) comorbidities and less obesity (31.4 vs. 15.5%) than patients admitted to the ICU. PaO/FiO ratio, respiratory rate and arterial pH were higher [165 vs. 244; 20 vs. 24 breath/min; 7.40 vs. 7.46] and PaCO and base excess were lower [34 vs. 42 mmHg; 0.60 vs. 1.30] in patients receiving respiratory support outside the ICU than in patients admitted to the ICU, respectively.
Increase in ICU beds and use of out-of-ICU respiratory support allowed effective management of the first 14 days of the Covid-19 outbreak, avoiding resource rationing.
About The Expert
Tommaso Tonetti
Giacomo Grasselli
Alberto Zanella
Giacinto Pizzilli
Roberto Fumagalli
Simone Piva
Luca Lorini
Giorgio Iotti
Giuseppe Foti
Sergio Colombo
Luigi Vivona
Sandra Rossi
Massimo Girardis
Vanni Agnoletti
Anselmo Campagna
Giovanni Gordini
Paolo Navalesi
Annalisa Boscolo
Alessandro Graziano
Ilaria Valeri
Andrea Vianello
Danilo Cereda
Claudia Filippini
Maurizio Cecconi
Franco Locatelli
Michele Bartoletti
Maddalena Giannella
Pierluigi Viale
Massimo Antonelli
Stefano Nava
Antonio Pesenti
V Marco Ranieri
References
PubMed