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Granular ICU data focussing on the impact of lactate readings on outcomes

Population Size

12,369

People

Years

2018 - 2020

Associated BioSamples

None/not available

Geographic coverage

United Kingdom

England

Lead time

1-2 months

Summary

A granular dataset of over 12,000 ICU admissions with lactate reading from 01/01/2018 to 31/12/2020 (pre-COVID). Detailed patient flow through the hospital providing severity, demographics, multi-morbidity, interventions, treatments and outcomes.

Documentation

Lactate is a chemical produced by the body as cells consume energy - in times of stress more lactate is produced. In the past, we thought that lactate was just a waste product, but more recently we have learned that lactate has an important role to play in the body.

People suffering from certain severe illnesses may have a high ‘lactate’ level in their blood. This is particularly common in the following:

Severe infections which the body cannot properly control (sepsis)

People who have sustained severe injuries (traumatic injury)

People who are critically unwell with other illnesses (needing treatment in an intensive care unit)

Some patients will develop a high lactate level when they are in hospital. Doctors recognise that this indicates the patient is becoming more unwell, but it is often challenging to know exactly what is causing the lactate level to be raised.

Raised lactate level has been associated with worse outcome in other syndromes, including major trauma and undifferentiated critical illness; however healthy individuals may generate very high lactate levels during strenuous exercise from which they recover without any harm. It is unclear whether lactate in itself is harmful to patients. This dataset provides unique insight into the potential role of lactate as not only a biomarker but a therapeutic target in acute illness.

PIONEER geography The West Midlands (WM) has a population of 5.9 million and includes a diverse ethnic and socio-economic mix.

EHR. UHB is one of the largest NHS Trusts in England, providing direct acute services and specialist care across four hospital sites, with 2.2 million patient episodes per year, 2750 beds and an expanded 250 ITU bed capacity during COVID. UHB runs a fully electronic healthcare record (EHR) (PICS; Birmingham Systems), a shared primary and secondary care record (Your Care Connected) and a patient portal “My Health”.

Scope: Longitudinal and individually linked, so that the preceding and subsequent health journey can be mapped and healthcare utilisation prior to and after admission understood. The dataset includes highly granular patient demographics, co-morbidities taken from ICD-10 and SNOMED-CT codes. Serial, structured data pertaining to process of care (timings, admissions, wards), presenting complaint, physiology readings (BMI, temperature and weight), Sample analysis results (blood sodium level, lactate, haemoglobin, oxygen saturations, and others) drug administered and all outcomes.

Available supplementary data: Matched controls; ambulance, OMOP data, synthetic data.

Available supplementary support: Analytics, Model build, validation & refinement; A.I.; Data partner support for ETL (extract, transform and load) process, Clinical expertise, Patient and end-user access, Purchaser access, Regulatory requirements, Data-driven trials, “fast screen” services.

Dataset type
Health and disease, Treatments/Interventions
Dataset sub-type
Metabolic and endocrine
Dataset population size
12369

Keywords

Lactate levels, Intravenous fluids, Patient outcomes, hypovolaemia, Blood volume, Oxygen levels, Critical Illness, Sepsis, Traumatic Injury, Hyperlactaemia, Acute Care

Observations

Observed Node
Disambiguating Description
Measured Value
Measured Property
Observation Date

Persons

12,369 ICU admissions with lactate reading from 01/01/2018 to 31/12/2020

12369

Count

25 Nov 2021

Provenance

Purpose of dataset collection
Care
Source of data extraction
EPR
Collection source setting
Secondary care - In-patients
Patient pathway description
Data is representative of the multi-ethnicity population within the West Midlands (42% non white). Data includes all patients admitted during this timeframe, with National data Opt Outs applied, and therefore is representative of admissions to secondary care. Data focuses on in-patient stay in hospital during the acute episode but can be supplemented on request to include previous and subsequent hospital contacts (including outpatient appointments) and ambulance, 111, 999 data.
Image contrast
Not stated
Biological sample availability
None/not available

Structural Metadata

Details

Publishing frequency
Quarterly
Version
1.0.0
Modified

08/10/2024

Distribution release date

25/11/2021

Citation Requirements
This publication uses data from PIONEER, an ethically approved database and analytical environment (East Midlands Derby Research Ethics 20/EM/0158)

Coverage

Start date

01/01/2018

End date

28/12/2020

Time lag
Other
Geographic coverage
United Kingdom, England, West Midlands
Minimum age range
19
Maximum age range
105
Follow-up
Other

Accessibility

Language
en
Alignment with standardised data models
LOCAL
Controlled vocabulary
SNOMED CT, ICD10
Format
SQL

Data Access Request

Dataset pipeline status
Available
Time to dataset access
1-2 months
Access request cost
www.pioneerdatahub.co.uk/data/data-services-costs/
Access method category
TRE/SDE
Access service description

Trusted Research Environments (TRE) are built using Microsoft Azure services and hosted in the UK to provide research teams a safe, secure and agile environment which allows users to quickly analyse, interpret and form an enriched view of primary care information through a range of integrated datasets.

Health data collated from multiple sources is ingested into a secure data lake which will then allow subsets of data to be made available to research teams on approval of a data request. Once approved a customer specific TRE is made available with a standard set of leading analytical tools from Microsoft including Azure Databricks, Azure Machine Learning, Azure SQL and Azure Synapse (for large-scale data warehouses). Specific tools can be provided at an additional cost over the standard platform data access charge and the PIONEER team will work with you to determine your exact needs.

Access to the TRE is managed using the latest virtual desktop technology to provide a safe and secure end-user experience. By utilising leading edge design PIONEER are able to create TREs rapidly to enable us to service any customer requirement.

Jurisdiction
GB-ENG
Data use limitation
General research use
Data use requirements
Project-specific restrictions
Data Controller
University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust

Dataset Types: Health and disease, Treatments/Interventions

Dataset Sub-types: Metabolic and endocrine


Collection Sources: Secondary care - In-patients