The Association of Mental Disorders with Mortality in Critically Ill Patients with Encephalitis: A Cohort Study
Alex Heo1, Sendhil Raj Karmegam1, Miriam Shayeb1, Malathi Perugula1, John Garza1, Madhuri Jakkam Setty1
1Texas Tech University Health Science Center
Objective:

To measure the population level association of mental health disorders with in-hospital mortality among patients with a diagnosis of encephalitis and to compare baseline characteristics between encephalitis  patients with and without mental disorders.

Background:

Studies have shown following encephalitis, cognitive deficits and psychiatric symptoms manifesting among patients is common and that greater care for these symptoms is needed following treatment for encephalitis, suggesting a relationship between encephalitis and mental health disorders. Literature has shown that a lower Glasgow Come Scale (GCS) score is associated with higher mortality rates. However, the impact of pre-existing mental health disorders preceding encephalitis on outcomes of the patient has not been extensively studied.

Design/Methods:

We conducted a population-based cohort study of adults admitted to intensive care units at acute care hospitals in Texas with a diagnosis of encephalitis during 2016-2022.  Hospitalizations with a diagnosis of encephalitis were identified with the aid of Clinical Classification Software Refined category NVS002:Encephalitis. The primary exposure was diagnosis of pre-existing mental disorder.  Propensity-adjusted multilevel logistic regression was used to test the association of mental disorders and in-hospital mortality. Subgroup and sensitivity analyses included demographics, types of mental disorders, type of admission, and principal diagnosis of encephalitis. Results are reported as adjusted odds ratio and 95% confidence interval (aOR 95%CI).

Results:

A total of 15,771 hospitalizations were identified with 4,327(27.4%) having mental disorders. Hospitalizations with mental disorders were younger, more often female, and more often White. In-hospital mortality was 4.6% for patients with mental disorders and 9.8% for patients without mental disorders. Mental disorders remained associated with mortality on adjusted analyses aOR 0.6770 (0.5614 - 0.8165). The results were consistent on subgroup, sensitivity and alternative analyses.

Conclusions:

Hospitalizations with mental disorders are associated with substantially reduced in-hospital mortality. Further studies are needed to understand the role of mental disorders in the outcomes of encephalitis hospitalizations.

10.1212/WNL.0000000000210663
Disclaimer: Abstracts were not reviewed by Neurology® and do not reflect the views of Neurology® editors or staff.