7 research outputs found

    Invasive Candida

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    Upper gastrointestinal tract (GIT) surgical procedures are more likely to cause nosocomial Candida peritonitis than lower GIT procedures and they thus constitute an independent risk factor for mortality. Because of the severity of postsurgical fungal infections complications, intensivists and surgeons need to be extremely aware of their clinical importance in critically ill postsurgical intensive care unit (ICU) patients. We analyzed the clinical and microbiological data of 149 oncologic patients who were hospitalized in the ICU at Soroka Medical Center between January 2010 and January 2015 after undergoing upper GIT surgery for gastric cancer. Invasive fungal infections related to secondary peritonitis following oncologic upper GIT surgery had a higher mortality rate than patients with nonfungal postoperative infectious complications. The presence of gastroesophageal junction leakage and advanced age were found to be independent risk factors for invasive fungal infection after oncologic upper GIT surgery

    The Safety and Impact of Raising the Urine Culture Reporting Threshold in Hospitalized Patients

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    Objective: To assess the impact of changing the reporting threshold policy of positive urine cultures in hospitalized non-pregnant adults from 104 CFU/mL to 105 CFU/mL on the unwarranted use of antibiotics and patient safety. Setting: A 1100-bed tertiary-care hospital in southern Israel. Methods: As an intervention, we changed urine culture reporting policy for patients admitted to general medical wards. If culture grew ≥105 CFU/mL, it was reported with pathogen and antibiotic susceptibility data, if it grew ≤104 CFU/mL, it was reported as “low growth". The withheld information was available upon request. We retrospectively collected data on all patients in a four-month period following the intervention and report using STROBE guidelines. Results: 7808 patients were admitted, in whom 3523 urine cultures were obtained. A total of 496 grew a pathogen, 51 were excluded (candida spp. positive, history of urinary surgery, obtained from catheter). A total of 300 were reported as positive and 145 were reported as low-growth. A higher rate of patients in the low-growth group were not treated with antibiotics 45/145(31%) vs. 56/300(18.7%) in the positive group p = 0.015 and the antibiotic duration of treatment was shorter by day 5 (IQR 0.9) vs. 6 (IQR 0.9) p = 0.015. No between-group difference was observed in recurrent admission rates, pyelonephritis within 30 days, bacteremia or all-cause mortality. Conclusions: Changing the reporting threshold of positive urine culture results from 104 CFU/mL to 105 CFU/mL in hospitalized patients reduced the number of patients who were unnecessarily treated for asymptomatic bacteriuria without negatively impacting patient safety. We urge microbiological laboratories to consider this change in threshold as part of an antimicrobial stewardship program

    The clinical significance of hyperglycemia in nondiabetic critically ill multiple trauma patients

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    Background: Information is inconsistent regarding the clinical role of acute elevations of blood glucose level secondary to hospital-acquired infections in nondiabetic critically ill patients during an intensive care unit stay. In this study we investigated the clinical significance of hyperglycemia related to new episodes of ventilator-associated pneumonia in nondiabetic critically ill multiple trauma intensive care unit patients. Materials and Methods: We analyzed the clinical data of 202 critically ill multiple trauma patients with no history of previous diabetes who developed a new ventilator-associated pneumonia episode during their intensive care unit stay. We used a time-from-event analysis method to assess whether acute changes in blood glucose levels that occurred prior to the onset of ventilator-associated pneumonia episodes had a different prognostic significance from those that occurred during such episodes. Glucose levels and other laboratory data were recorded for up to 5 days before ventilator-associated pneumonia events and for 5 days following these events. Results: Patients who required insulin therapy for persistent hyperglycemia related to a new ventilator-associated pneumonia event had a longer period of intensive care unit stay and a higher intensive care unit mortality rate than patients who did not require insulin for blood glucose control ( p < 0.008 and <0.001 respectively). In addition, older age, administration of parenteral nutrition, and elevated mean blood glucose level parameters on the day following the day of diagnosis of a new ventilator-associated pneumonia episode were found to be independent risk factors for intensive care unit mortality. Conclusion: Our study suggests that persistent hyperglycemia in nondiabetic critically ill patients, even treated by early insulin therapy, is an adverse prognostic factor of considerable clinical significance

    The impact of the blood glucose levels of non-diabetic critically ill patients on their clinical outcome

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    Background: Stress hyperglycaemia is thought to result from a hormonal response (release of catecholamines,glucocorticoids, glucagon, etc.) following stress, sepsis or trauma. Although stress hyperglycaemia is a very commonfinding in critically ill populations, there are many non-diabetic critically ill patients who do not develop a hyperglycaemicstress response to trauma or acute illness. We suggest that the lack of a hyperglycaemic stress responseduring the acute phase of a critical illness may correlate significantly with the clinical outcome of these critically illnon-diabetic patients. Methods: This was a retrospective study of 700 non-diabetic critically ill patients admitted to the general intensivecare unit (ICU) at Soroka Medical Center, Beer Sheva, Israel. We analyzed the clinical impact of the blood glucose levelsof these patients measured during their first week of ICU hospitalization on their clinical outcome. Results: Age, male gender, and the Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) score were found tobe independent risk factors for new episodes of infection during the patients’ stay in the ICU. Age and the APACHEand Sequential Organ Failure Assessment scores were found to be independent risk factors for intra-ICU mortality. Incontrast, blood glucose analysis performed during the patients’ stay in the ICU was not found to be an independentpredictor for new infectious events or for mortality during the ICU stay. Conclusion: Our study did not demonstrate an association between blood glucose levels and clinical outcomes innon-diabetic critically ill patients

    Invasive Candida Infection after Upper Gastrointestinal Tract Surgery for Gastric Cancer

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    Upper gastrointestinal tract (GIT) surgical procedures are more likely to cause nosocomial Candida peritonitis than lower GIT procedures and they thus constitute an independent risk factor for mortality. Because of the severity of postsurgical fungal infections complications, intensivists and surgeons need to be extremely aware of their clinical importance in critically ill postsurgical intensive care unit (ICU) patients. We analyzed the clinical and microbiological data of 149 oncologic patients who were hospitalized in the ICU at Soroka Medical Center between January 2010 and January 2015 after undergoing upper GIT surgery for gastric cancer. Invasive fungal infections related to secondary peritonitis following oncologic upper GIT surgery had a higher mortality rate than patients with nonfungal postoperative infectious complications. The presence of gastroesophageal junction leakage and advanced age were found to be independent risk factors for invasive fungal infection after oncologic upper GIT surgery
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