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Update on the Epimed Monitor Adult ICU Database: 15 years of its use in national registries, quality improvement initiatives and clinical research.

Márcio SoaresLunna Perdigão BorgesLeonardo Dos Santos Lourenco BastosFernando Godinho ZampieriGabriel Alves MirandaPedro Martins Pereira KurtzSuzana Margareth Ajeje LoboLucas Rodrigo Garcia de MelloGastón BurghiEderlon Alves de Carvalho RezendeOtávio Tavares RanzaniJorge Ibrahin Figueira Salluh
Published in: Critical care science (2024)
In recent decades, several databases of critically ill patients have become available in both low-, middle-, and high-income countries from all continents. These databases are also rich sources of data for the surveillance of emerging diseases, intensive care unit performance evaluation and benchmarking, quality improvement projects and clinical research. The Epimed Monitor database is turning 15 years old in 2024 and has become one of the largest of these databases. In recent years, there has been rapid geographical expansion, an increase in the number of participating intensive care units and hospitals, and the addition of several new variables and scores, allowing a more complete characterization of patients to facilitate multicenter clinical studies. As of December 2023, the database was being used regularly for 23,852 beds in 1,723 intensive care units and 763 hospitals from ten countries, totaling more than 5.6 million admissions. In addition, critical care societies have adopted the system and its database to establish national registries and international collaborations. In the present review, we provide an updated description of the database; report experiences of its use in critical care for quality improvement initiatives, national registries and clinical research; and explore other potential future perspectives and developments.
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