1. Risk factors and outcomes of infections caused by extremely drug-resistant gram-negative bacilli in patients hospitalized in intensive care units
- Author
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Juyan Julia Zhou, André P. Oliveira, Stephen G. Jenkins, Haomiao Jia, Maryam Behta, Luis Alba, Phyllis Della-Latta, Scott A. Weisenberg, E. Yoko Furuya, Audrey N. Schuetz, Kyu Y. Rhee, Sameer J. Patel, Lisa Saiman, Christine J. Kubin, Susan Whittier, and Sarah A. Clock
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology ,Levofloxacin ,Drug resistance ,Article ,Immunocompromised Host ,Liver disease ,Risk Factors ,Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial ,Intensive care ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pseudomonas Infections ,Hospital Mortality ,Amikacin ,Aged ,Cross Infection ,business.industry ,Liver Diseases ,Health Policy ,Hazard ratio ,Age Factors ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Case-control study ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Klebsiella Infections ,Surgery ,Intensive Care Units ,Klebsiella pneumoniae ,Infectious Diseases ,Case-Control Studies ,Pseudomonas aeruginosa ,Female ,Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections ,business ,Acinetobacter Infections ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Extremely drug-resistant gram-negative bacilli (XDR-GNB) increasingly cause health care-associated infections (HAIs) in intensive care units (ICUs). Methods A matched case-control (1:2) study was conducted from February 2007 to January 2010 in 16 ICUs. Case and control subjects had HAIs caused by GNB susceptible to ≤1 antibiotic versus ≥2 antibiotics, respectively. Logistic and Cox proportional hazards regression assessed risk factors for HAIs and predictors of mortality, respectively. Results Overall, 103 case and 195 control subjects were enrolled. An immunocompromised state (odds ratio [OR], 1.55; P = .047) and exposure to amikacin (OR, 13.81; P P = .005), or trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (OR, 3.42; P = .009) were factors associated with XDR-GNB HAIs. Multiple factors in both case and control subjects significantly predicted increased mortality at different time intervals after HAI diagnosis. At 7 days, liver disease (hazard ratio [HR], 5.52), immunocompromised state (HR, 3.41), and bloodstream infection (HR, 2.55) predicted mortality; at 15 days, age (HR, 1.02 per year increase), liver disease (HR, 3.34), and immunocompromised state (HR, 2.03) predicted mortality; and, at 30 days, age (HR, 1.02 per 1-year increase), liver disease (HR, 3.34), immunocompromised state (HR, 2.03), and hospitalization in a medical ICU (HR, 1.85) predicted mortality. Conclusion HAIs caused by XDR-GNB were associated with potentially modifiable factors. Age, liver disease, and immunocompromised state, but not XDR-GNB HAIs, were associated with mortality.
- Published
- 2014
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