This was a dual-center, prospective observational cohort study of 247 critically ill adult patients in the ICU. The study assessed muscle indices via ultrasound within 24 hours of admission and compared survivors versus non-survivors at 60 days.
The primary outcome was 60-day all-cause mortality, with 53 patients dying (21.50%). Tibialis anterior pennation angle (TA-PA) was an independent predictor of 60-day mortality (β = −0.216, P = 0.035). Non-survivors had significantly lower TA-PA (7.08 [5.63–8.48]) compared to survivors (7.94 [6.62–9.32], P = 0.002).
A predictive nomogram combining TA-PA, APACHE II score, and prealbumin level had a C-index of 0.785 (95% CI: 0.728–0.834), with an AUC comparison P = 0.023 versus APACHE II alone.
No adverse events, serious adverse events, discontinuations, or tolerability data were reported. Key limitations include the observational design, which precludes causal inference, and the lack of external validation.
Practice relevance is restrained: lower TA-PA at ICU admission may improve early risk stratification when combined with APACHE II and prealbumin, but findings require further validation before clinical use.
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BackgroundSkeletal muscle is an important organ strongly associated with prognosis in critically ill patients. 60-day mortality represents a key endpoint for evaluating the transitional phase from ICU survival to functional recovery, yet the association between ultrasound-derive muscle indices at ICU admission and 60-day mortality remains unclear.MethodsThis dual-center, prospective observational study was performed from January to December 2024. Four ultrasound indices of muscle quantity [thickness and cross-sectional area of the rectus femoris (RF-TH and RF-CSA), thickness of the vastus intermedius (VI-TH), thickness of the quadriceps femoris (QF-TH)], and one index of quality (tibialis anterior pennation angle, TA-PA) were assessed within 24 h of ICU admission. The primary endpoint was 60-day all-cause mortality. To identify predictive factors, multivariable logistic regression analysis was employed. Additionally, a predictive nomogram model was developed.ResultsA total of 247 critically ill adult patients were included, with a median age of 61.0 years (51.0–72.0), including 171 males (69.20%). During 60-day follow-up, 53 patients (21.50%) died. Compared with the survivors, the non-survivors exhibited significantly lower RF-TH (0.54 [0.43–0.70] vs. 0.64 [0.48–0.85]cm; P = 0.022), VI-TH (0.64 [0.47–0.86] vs. 0.77 [0.64–1.04]cm; P = 0.002), QF-TH (1.32 [0.96–1.63] vs. 1.48 [1.24–1.97]cm; P =0.005) and TA-PA (7.08[5.63–8.48] vs. 7.94[6.62–9.32]; P =0.002). Among them, TA-PA was identified as an independent predictor of 60-day mortality (β = −0.216, P = 0.035). TA-PA, in conjunction with APACHE II score and prealbumin level, constructed a predictive nomogram, with a consistency index (C-index) of 0.785 (95%CI: 0.728–0.834). Calibration assessed by Spiegelhalter Z-test showed P > 0.05 indicating adequate calibration for the predicted and observed models. Decision curve analysis (DCA) confirmed that the nomogram prediction model had good clinical benefits. Internal validation demonstrated stable model performance, with a concordance statistic (C-index) of 0.785. Compared to the ROC curve based solely on APACHE II score, the nomogram exhibited significantly higher area under the curve (AUC) (0.785, 95%CI: 0.728–0.834 vs. 0.726, 95%CI: 0.666–0.781, P = 0.023).ConclusionsLower TA-PA at ICU admission is an independent predictor of 60-day mortality. Incorporating this ultrasound-derived muscle quality index with APACHE II score and prealbumin level may improve early risk stratification in critically ill patients.