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A multicenter multinational study of abdominal candidiasis: epidemiology, outcomes and predictors of mortality
- Source :
- Intensive care medicine. 41(9)
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Purpose: Clinical data on patients with intra-abdominal candidiasis (IAC) is still scarce. Methods: We collected data from 13 hospitals in Italy, Spain, Brazil, and Greece over a 3-year period (2011–2013) including patients from ICU, medical, and surgical wards. Results: A total of 481 patients were included in the study. Of these, 27 % were hospitalized in ICU. Mean age was 63 years and 57 % of patients were male. IAC mainly consisted of secondary peritonitis (41 %) and abdominal abscesses (30 %); 68 (14 %) cases were also candidemic and 331 (69 %) hadconcomitant bacterial infections. The most commonly isolated Candida species were C. albicans (n = 308 isolates, 64 %) and C. glabrata (n = 76, 16 %). Antifungal treatment included echinocandins (64 %), azoles (32 %), and amphotericin B (4 %). Septic shock was documented in 40.5 % of patients. Overall 30-day hospital mortality was 27 % with 38.9 % mortality in ICU. Multivariate logistic regression showed that age (OR 1.05, 95 % CI 1.03–1.07, P\0.001), increments in 1-point APACHE II scores (OR 1.05, 95 % CI 1.01–1.08, P = 0.028), secondary peritonitis (OR 1.72, 95 % CI 1.02–2.89, P = 0.019), septic shock (OR 3.29, 95 % CI 1.88–5.86, P\0.001), and absence of adequate abdominal source control (OR 3.35, 95 % CI 2.01–5.63, P\0.001) wereassociated with mortality. In patients with septic shock, absence of source control correlated with mortality rates above 60 % irrespective of administration of an adequate antifungal therapy. Conclusions: Low percentages of concomitant candidemia and high mortality rates are documented in IAC. In patients presenting with septic shock, source control is fundamental.
- Subjects :
- Abdominal candidiasis
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Candida bloodstream infection
Settore MED/17 - MALATTIE INFETTIVE
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Risk Assessment
Cohort Studies
Source control
Risk Factors
Adequate treatment
Antifungal therapy
Candida
Mortality
Internal medicine
Epidemiology
Abdomen
medicine
Humans
Retrospective Studies
Greece
Septic shock
business.industry
Brazil
Female
Italy
Middle Aged
Prognosis
Shock, Septic
Spain
Candidiasis
Septic
Mortality rate
Retrospective cohort study
Shock
medicine.disease
Surgery
medicine.anatomical_structure
Concomitant
Shock (circulatory)
medicine.symptom
Abdominal candidiasi
business
Cohort study
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14321238
- Volume :
- 41
- Issue :
- 9
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Intensive care medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....48d27ca0e1b8d7094b99e8a4ad04483f