An international prospective study of INICC analyzing the incidence and risk factors for catheter-associated urinary tract infections in 235 ICUs across 8 Asian Countries

Victor D. Rosenthal,Ruijie Yin,Lilian M. Abbo, Brandon H. Lee,Camilla Rodrigues, Sheila N. Myatra,Jigeeshu V. Divatia,Mohit Kharbanda,Bikas Nag,Prasad Rajhans, Vasudha Shingte,Yatin Mehta,Smita Sarma,Subhash K. Todi,Mahuya Bhattacharyya,Sushmita Basu,Suneeta Sahu, Shakti B. Mishra,Samir Samal,Rajesh Chawla, Aakanksha C. Jain, Pravin K. Nair, Durga Kalapala,Rajalakshmi Arjun,Deepak Singla,Kavita Sandhu,Binesh Badyal, Vijayanand Palaniswamy,Arpita Bhakta, Chin S. Gan, Mat N. Mohd-Basri, Yin H. Lai,Chian-Wern Tai,Pei-Chuen Lee,Ider Bat-Erdene,Tsolmon Begzjav, Subhash P. Acharya, Reshma Dongol,Aamer Ikram, Nellie Tumu,Lili Tao,Zhilin Jin

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INFECTION CONTROL(2024)

引用 0|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
Background: Identify urinary catheter (UC)-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI) incidence and risk factors (RF) in 235 ICUs in 8 Asian countries: India, Malaysia, Mongolia, Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam. Methods: From January 1, 2014, to February 12, 2022, we conducted a prospective cohort study. To estimate CAUTI incidence, the number of UC days was the denominator, and CAUTI was the numerator. To estimate CAUTI RFs, we analyzed 11 variables using multiple logistic regression. Results: 84,920 patients hospitalized for 499,272 patient days acquired 869 CAUTIs. The pooled CAUTI rate per 1,000 UC-days was 3.08; for those using suprapubic-catheters (4.11); indwelling-catheters (2.65); trauma-ICU (10.55), neurologic-ICU (7.17), neurosurgical-ICU (5.28); in lower middle-income countries (3.05); in upper-middle-income countries (1.71); at public-hospitals (5.98), at private-hospitals (3.09), at teaching-hospitals (2.04). The following variables were identified as CAUTI RFs: Age (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 1.01; 95% CI = 1.01-1.02; P < .0001); female sex (aOR = 1.39; 95% CI = 1.21-1.59; P < .0001); using suprapubic-catheter (aOR = 4.72; 95% CI = 1.69-13.21; P < .0001); length of stay before CAUTI acquisition (aOR = 1.04; 95% CI = 1.04-1.05; P < .0001); UC and device utilization-ratio (aOR = 1.07; 95% CI = 1.01-1.13; P = .02); hospitalized at trauma-ICU (aOR = 14.12; 95% CI = 4.68-42.67; P < .0001), neurologic-ICU (aOR = 14.13; 95% CI = 6.63-30.11; P < .0001), neurosurgical-ICU (aOR = 13.79; 95% CI = 6.88-27.64; P < .0001); public-facilities (aOR = 3.23; 95% CI = 2.34-4.46; P < .0001). Discussion: CAUTI rate and risk are higher for older patients, women, hospitalized at trauma-ICU, neurologic-ICU, neurosurgical-ICU, and public facilities. All of them are unlikely to change. Conclusions: It is suggested to focus on reducing the length of stay and the Urinary catheter device utilization ratio, avoiding suprapubic catheters, and implementing evidence-based CAUTI prevention recommendations. (c) 2023 Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Rates
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要