1. Multinational prospective cohort study of incidence and risk factors for central line-associated bloodstream infections in ICUs of 8 Latin American countries.
- Author
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Rosenthal VD, Jin Z, Valderrama-Beltran SL, Gualtero SM, Linares CY, Aguirre-Avalos G, Mijangos-Méndez JC, Ibarra-Estrada MÁ, Jiménez-Alvarez LF, Reyes LP, Alvarez-Moreno CA, Zuniga-Chavarria MA, Quesada-Mora AM, Gomez K, Alarcon J, Millan-Oñate J, Aguilar-de-Moros D, Castaño-Guerrero E, Córdoba J, Sassoe-Gonzalez A, Millán-Castillo CM, Leyva-Xotlanihua L, Aguilar-Moreno LA, Bravo-Ojeda JS, Gutierrez-Tobar IF, Aleman-Bocanegra MC, Echazarreta-Martínez CV, Flores-Sánchez BM, Cano-Medina YA, Chapeta-Parada EG, Gonzalez-Niño RA, Villegas-Mota MI, Montoya-Malváez M, Cortés-Vázquez MÁ, Medeiros EA, Fram D, Vieira-Escudero D, Dueñas L, Carreazo NY, Salgado E, and Yin R
- Subjects
- Humans, Prospective Studies, Latin America epidemiology, Incidence, Intensive Care Units, Risk Factors, Cross Infection prevention & control, Catheter-Related Infections prevention & control, Sepsis epidemiology, Catheterization, Central Venous adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Our objective was to identify central line (CL)-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSI) rates and risk factors in Latin-America., Methods: From January 1, 2014 to February 10, 2022, we conducted a multinational multicenter prospective cohort study in 58 ICUs of 34 hospitals in 21 cities in 8 Latin American countries (Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Mexico, Panama). We applied multiple-logistic regression. Outcomes are shown as adjusted-odds ratios (aOR)., Results: About 29,385 patients were hospitalized during 92,956 days, acquired 400 CLABSIs, and pooled CLABSI rate was 4.30 CLABSIs per 1,000 CL-days. We analyzed following 10 variables: Gender, age, length of stay (LOS) before CLABSI acquisition, CL-days before CLABSI acquisition, CL-device utilization (DU) ratio, CL-type, tracheostomy use, hospitalization type, intensive care unit (ICU) type, and facility ownership, Following variables were independently associated with CLABSI: LOS before CLABSI acquisition, rising risk 3% daily (aOR=1.03;95%CI=1.02-1.04; P < .0001); number of CL-days before CLABSI acquisition, rising risk 4% per CL-day (aOR=1.04;95%CI=1.03-1.05; P < .0001); publicly-owned facility (aOR=2.33;95%CI=1.79-3.02; P < .0001). ICU with highest risk was medical-surgical (aOR=2.61;95%CI=1.41-4.81; P < .0001). CL with the highest risk were femoral (aOR=2.71;95%CI=1.61-4.55; P < .0001), and internal-jugular (aOR=2.62;95%CI=1.82-3.79; P < .0001). PICC (aOR=1.25;95%CI=0.63-2.51; P = .52) was not associated with CLABSI risk., Conclusions: Based on these findings it is suggested to focus on reducing LOS, CL-days, using PICC instead of femoral or internal-jugular; and implementing evidence-based CLABSI prevention recommendations., (Copyright © 2023 Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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