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Health-care-associated bloodstream and urinary tract infections in a network of hospitals in India: a multicentre, hospital-based, prospective surveillance study

Authors :
Purva Mathur
Paul Malpiedi
Kamini Walia
Padmini Srikantiah
Sunil Gupta
Ayush Lohiya
Arunaloke Chakrabarti
Pallab Ray
Manisha Biswal
Neelam Taneja
Priscilla Rupali
Veeraraghavan Balaji
Camilla Rodrigues
Vijaya Lakshmi Nag
Vibhor Tak
Vimala Venkatesh
Chiranjay Mukhopadhyay
Vijayshri Deotale
Kanne Padmaja
Chand Wattal
Sanjay Bhattacharya
Tadepalli Karuna
Bijayini Behera
Sanjeev Singh
Reema Nath
Raja Ray
Sujata Baveja
Bashir A Fomda
Khumanthem Sulochana Devi
Padma Das
Neeta Khandelwal
Prachi Verma
Prithwis Bhattacharyya
Rajni Gaind
Lata Kapoor
Neil Gupta
Aditya Sharma
Daniel VanderEnde
Valan Siromany
Kayla Laserson
Randeep Guleria
Rajesh Malhotra
Omika Katoch
Sonal Katyal
Surbhi Khurana
Subodh Kumar
Richa Agrawal
Kapil Dev Soni
Sushma Sagar
Naveet Wig
Pramod Garg
Arti Kapil
Rakesh Lodha
Manoj Sahu
M.C. Misra
Mamta Lamba
Shristi Jain
Hema Paul
Joy Sarojini Michael
Pradeep Kumar Bhatia
Kuldeep Singh
Neeraj Gupta
Daisy Khera
D Himanshu
Sheetal Verma
Prashant Gupta
Mala Kumar
Mohammed Pervez Khan
Sarika Gupta
Vandana Kalwaje Eshwara
Muralidhar Varma
Ruchita Attal
Sukanya Sudhaharan
Neeraj Goel
Saurabh Saigal
Sagar Khadanga
Ayush Gupta
M.A. Thirunarayan
Nandini Sethuraman
Ujjaini Roy
Hirak Jyoti Raj
Desma D'Souza
Mammen Chandy
Sudipta Mukherjee
Manas Kumar Roy
Gaurav Goel
Swagata Tripathy
Satyajeet Misra
Anupam Dey
Tushar Misra
Rashmi Ranjan Das
Gulnaz Bashir
Shaista Nazir
Khuraijam Ranjana Devi
Langpoklakpam Chaoba Singh
Anudita Bhargava
Ujjwala Gaikwad
Geeta Vaghela
Tanvi Sukharamwala
Anil Ch. Phukan
Clarissa Lyngdoh
Rushika Saksena
Rajeev Sharma
Anoop Velayudhan
Source :
The Lancet Global Health. 10:e1317-e1325
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Health-care-associated infections (HAIs) cause significant morbidity and mortality globally, including in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). Networks of hospitals implementing standardised HAI surveillance can provide valuable data on HAI burden, and identify and monitor HAI prevention gaps. Hospitals in many LMICs use HAI case definitions developed for higher-resourced settings, which require human resources and laboratory and imaging tests that are often not available.A network of 26 tertiary-level hospitals in India was created to implement HAI surveillance and prevention activities. Existing HAI case definitions were modified to facilitate standardised, resource-appropriate surveillance across hospitals. Hospitals identified health-care-associated bloodstream infections and urinary tract infections (UTIs) and reported clinical and microbiological data to the network for analysis.26 network hospitals reported 2622 health-care-associated bloodstream infections and 737 health-care-associated UTIs from 89 intensive care units (ICUs) between May 1, 2017, and Oct 31, 2018. Central line-associated bloodstream infection rates were highest in neonatal ICUs (20 per 1000 central line days). Catheter-associated UTI rates were highest in paediatric medical ICUs (4·5 per 1000 urinary catheter days). Klebsiella spp (24·8%) were the most frequent organism in bloodstream infections and Candida spp (29·4%) in UTIs. Carbapenem resistance was common in Gram-negative infections, occurring in 72% of bloodstream infections and 76% of UTIs caused by Klebsiella spp, 77% of bloodstream infections and 76% of UTIs caused by Acinetobacter spp, and 64% of bloodstream infections and 72% of UTIs caused by Pseudomonas spp.The first standardised HAI surveillance network in India has succeeded in implementing locally adapted and context-appropriate protocols consistently across hospitals and has been able to identify a large number of HAIs. Network data show high HAI and antimicrobial resistance rates in tertiary hospitals, showing the importance of implementing multimodal HAI prevention and antimicrobial resistance containment strategies.US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cooperative agreement with All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi.For the Hindi translation of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section.

Details

ISSN :
2214109X
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet Global Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....24f5ec6eb1ce68a8465e74767f061795