KUMJ | VOL. 23 | NO. 3 | ISSUE 91 | JULY-SEPTEMBER, 2025
Clinical Characteristics and Outcomes of Anemia in Critically Ill Patients: A Cross-Sectional Observational Study from a Tertiary Intensive Care Unit in Nepal
Simkhada N, Pathak S, Thapa N, Poudel P, Dhakal B, Upadhyay G, Thapa J, Regmi A, Ojha S, Adhikari S
Abstract: Background
Anemia is a common clinical problem among critically ill patients; however, its
prognostic significance remains debatable. In low-resource settings, such as Nepal,
data are limited. This study evaluated the clinical, laboratory, and outcome profiles
of anemia in a tertiary Intensive Care Unit.
Objective
To assess the clinical characteristics, laboratory features, and outcomes of anemia in
critically ill patients admitted to a tertiary Intensive Care Unit in Nepal.
Method
This retrospective observational study included 113 adult Intensive Care Unit
patients with anemia admitted to Dhulikhel Hospital, Nepal, from October 2024
to March 2025 after obtaining ethical approval from the Institutional Review
Committee, Kathmandu University School of Medical Sciences (IRC, KUSMS-156/25).
Demographic data, anemia severity, laboratory markers, including peripheral blood
smear (PBS), and outcomes, such as mortality and Intensive Care Unit stay, were
analyzed using IBM SPSS Statistics version 25.0. Categorical variables were compared
with Chi-square tests, continuous variables with independent t-test or Mann-
Whitney U test, and correlations were assessed with Spearman’s rank method.
Result
The median hemoglobin level was 97 g/L (78-112g/L), and mild anemia was the
most common (49.5%). Mortality correlated strongly with abnormal peripheral
blood smear (p < 0.001, r = 0.52) and moderately with older age (p = 0.012, r =
0.35). Although anemia severity was not statistically significant (p = 0.423), its weak
positive correlation (r = 0.15) indicates a potential trend.
Conclusion
Peripheral blood smear abnormalities and advanced age strongly predict mortality
in critically ill patients, while anemia severity alone does not. Routine smear use in
resource-limited ICUs may aid early risk stratification and improve care.
Keyword : Anemia, Critical Illness, Intensive care unit, Nepal