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ARTICLE |

Respiratory Failure in Cancer Patients

Richard M. Snow, MD; Warren C. Miller, MD; David L. Rice, MD; M. Khalil Ali, MD, PhD
JAMA. 1979;241(19):2039-2042. doi:10.1001/jama.1979.03290450037021.
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A review of 180 cancer patients requiring mechanical ventilation disclosed that 26% survived to extubation, and 13% and 7% were alive at two and six months, respectively. Mortality was related to several factors individually and the cumulative number of organ systems dysfunctioning in a given patient. Compared with general intensive care patients, those with respiratory failure and neoplastic disease demonstrated a high incidence of drug-induced pulmonary disease, hematologic abnormalities, pneumothorax, and infections with multiple and unusual organisms—all of which alter the approach to management. Although the long-term survival was poor, immediate survival was comparable with that of many groups of patients with respiratory failure.

(JAMA 241:2039-2042, 1979)

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