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Association between Source of Infection and Hospital Mortality in Patients Who Have Septic Shock

Mortality caused by septic shock may be determined by a systemic inflammatory response, independent of the inciting infection, but it may also be influenced by the anatomic source of infection. To determine the association between the anatomic source of infection and hospital mortality in critically...

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Published in:American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine 2014-05, Vol.189 (10), p.1204-1213
Main Authors: LELIGDOWICZ, Aleksandra, DODEK, Peter M, NORENA, Monica, WONG, Hubert, KUMAR, Aseem, KUMAR, Anand
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description Mortality caused by septic shock may be determined by a systemic inflammatory response, independent of the inciting infection, but it may also be influenced by the anatomic source of infection. To determine the association between the anatomic source of infection and hospital mortality in critically ill patients who have septic shock. This was a retrospective, multicenter cohort study of 7,974 patients who had septic shock in 29 academic and community intensive care units in Canada, the United States, and Saudi Arabia from January 1989 to May 2008. Subjects were assigned 1 of 20 anatomic sources of infection based on clinical diagnosis and/or isolation of pathogens. The primary outcome was hospital mortality. Overall crude hospital mortality was 52% (21-85% across sources of infection). Variation in mortality remained after adjusting for year of admission, geographic source of admission, age, sex, comorbidities, community- versus hospital-acquired infection, and organism type. The source of infection with the highest standardized hospital mortality was ischemic bowel (75%); the lowest was obstructive uropathy-associated urinary tract infection (26%). Residual variation in adjusted hospital mortality was not explained by Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II score, number of Day 1 organ failures, bacteremia, appropriateness of empiric antimicrobials, or adjunct therapies. In patients who received appropriate antimicrobials after onset of hypotension, source of infection was associated with death after adjustment for both predisposing and downstream factors. Anatomic source of infection should be considered in future trial designs and analyses, and in development of prognostic scoring systems.
doi_str_mv 10.1164/rccm.201310-1875oc
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subjects Abscesses
Aged
Anesthesia. Intensive care medicine. Transfusions. Cell therapy and gene therapy
Anti-Infective Agents - therapeutic use
Antimicrobial agents
Biological and medical sciences
Canada - epidemiology
Cardiovascular disease
Cohort analysis
Cohort Studies
Critical Illness - mortality
Cross Infection - diagnosis
Cross Infection - drug therapy
Cross Infection - microbiology
Cross Infection - mortality
Emergency and intensive care: infection, septic shock
Female
Gram-positive bacteria
Hospital Mortality
Hospitals
Humans
Hypotension
Intensive care
Intensive care medicine
Intensive Care Units
Ischemia
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Mortality
Nosocomial infections
Pathogens
Peritonitis
Physiology
Pneumology
Retrospective Studies
Risk Factors
Saudi Arabia - epidemiology
Sepsis
Shock, Septic - diagnosis
Shock, Septic - drug therapy
Shock, Septic - microbiology
Shock, Septic - mortality
United States - epidemiology
Urinary tract diseases
Urinary tract infections
Urogenital system
Variables
title Association between Source of Infection and Hospital Mortality in Patients Who Have Septic Shock
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