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Infections are Common in ICUs World-Wide
Newswise — An international study that
examined the extent of infections in nearly
1,300 intensive care units (ICUs) in 75
countries found that about 50 percent of the
patients were considered infected, with
infection associated with an increased risk
of death in the hospital, according to a
study in the December 2 issue of JAMA.
“Infection and related sepsis are the
leading cause of death in noncardiac ICUs,
with mortality rates that reach 60 percent
and account for approximately 40 percent of
total ICU expenditures,” the authors write.
International data related to the
prevalence, risk factors, microorganisms
causing the infections and outcomes of
infection are necessary to increase
awareness of the impact of infection, and to
help in the development of local and
international guidelines for diagnosis and
treatment and guide resource allocation,
according to background information in the
article.
However, little information is available
about the global epidemiology of infections
in ICUs.
Jean-Louis Vincent, M.D., Ph.D., of Erasme
Hospital, Université libre de Bruxelles,
Belgium, and colleagues conducted a study to
provide an indication of the extent and
patterns of infection in ICUs around the
world.
The Extended Prevalence of Infection in
Intensive Care (EPIC II) study was a 1-day
study (May 8, 2007), in which data including
demographic, physiologic, bacteriological,
therapeutic, and outcomes were collected on
this day for 14,414 patients in 1,265
participating ICUs from 75 countries.
Analyses focused on the data from 13,796
adult (18 years or older) patients.
The researchers found that on the day of the
study, 51 percent of the patients (7,087)
were classified as infected and 71 percent
were receiving antibiotics (as prophylaxis
or treatment).
The lungs were the most common site of
infection, accounting for 64 percent of
infections, followed by the abdomen and
bloodstream.
“Seventy percent of infected patients had
positive microbial isolates: 47 percent of
the positive isolates were gram-positive, 62
percent gram-negative, and 19 percent
fungal.”
The authors also found a relationship
between the number of days spent in the ICU
before the study day and the rate of
infection: the infection rate increased from
32 percent for patients with an ICU stay of
0 or 1 day before the day of the study to
more than 70 percent for patients with an
ICU stay of more than 7 days before the day
of the study.
Infected patients had longer ICU and
hospital lengths of stay than those not
infected. The ICU mortality rate of infected
patients was more than twice that of
noninfected patients (25 percent vs. 11
percent), as was the hospital mortality rate
(33 percent vs. 15 percent).
In examining infection rates in different
areas of the world, Central and South
America had the highest infection rate (60
percent) and Africa had the lowest (46
percent).
Also, infection rates were related to health
care expenditure, with higher rates of
infection reported in countries that had a
lower proportion of gross domestic product
devoted to health care.
“The EPIC II study demonstrates that
infections remain a common problem in ICU
patients,” the authors write. “These
important data provide a picture of patterns
of infection around the world, which can
enhance understanding of global and regional
differences and provide pointers to help
optimize infection prophylaxis and
management.”
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