Predictors of mortality of streptococcal bacteremia and the role of infectious diseases consultation; a retrospective cohort study.

Nicolas Fourre, Virgile Zimmermann,Laurence Senn, Marion Aruanno,Benoit Guery,Matthaios Papadimitriou-Olivgeris

Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America(2024)

引用 0|浏览2
暂无评分
摘要
BACKGROUND:Streptococcal bacteremia is associated with high mortality. The study aims to identify predictors of mortality among patients with streptococcal bacteremia. METHODS:This retrospective study was conducted at the Lausanne University Hospital, Switzerland and included episodes of streptococcal bacteremia among adult patients from 2015 to 2023. RESULTS:During the study period, 861 episodes of streptococcal bacteremia were included. The majority of episodes were categorized in the Mitis group (348 episodes; 40%), followed by the Pyogenic group (215; 25%). Endocarditis was the most common source of bacteremia (164; 19%). The overall 14-day mortality rate was 8% (65 episodes). The results from the Cox multivariable regression model showed that a Charlson comorbidity index >4 (P 0.001; HR 2.87, CI 1.58-5.22), S. pyogenes (P 0.011; HR 2.54, CI 1.24-5.21), sepsis (P < 0.001; HR 7.48, CI 3.86-14.47), lower respiratory tract infection (P 0.002; HR 2.62, CI 1.42-4.81), and absence of source control interventions within 48 hours despite being warranted (P 0.002; HR 2.62, CI 1.43-4.80) were associated with 14-day mortality. Conversely, interventions performed within 48 hours of bacteremia onset, such as infectious diseases consultation (P < 0.001; HR 0.29, CI 0.17-0.48), and appropriate antimicrobial treatment (P < 0.001; HR 0.28, CI 0.14-0.57) were associated with improved outcome. CONCLUSIONS:Our findings underscore the pivotal role of infectious diseases consultation in guiding antimicrobial treatment and recommending source control interventions for patients with streptococcal bacteremia.
更多
查看译文
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