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Bloodstream infections and sepsis in Greece: Over-time change of epidemiology and impact of de-escalation on final outcome

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Auteur
Koupetori, M.; Retsas, T.; Antonakos, N.; Vlachogiannis, G.; Perdios, I.; Nathanail, C.; Makaritsis, K.; Papadopoulos, A.; Sinapidis, D.; Giamarellos-Bourboulis, E. J.; Pneumatikos, I.; Gogos, C.; Armaganidis, A.; Paramythiotou, E.
Date
2014
DOI
10.1186/1471-2334-14-272
Sujet
Bloodstream infections
De-escalation
Resistance
Sepsis
beta lactamase inhibitor
carbapenem
cephalosporin derivative
ciprofloxacin
piperacillin plus tazobactam
polypeptide antibiotic agent
antiinfective agent
adult
aged
article
bloodstream infection
deescalation
disease severity
drug substitution
drug use
female
Gram negative bacterium
Greece
health care facility
hemofiltration
human
incidence
intensive care unit
Klebsiella pneumoniae
major clinical study
male
mortality
multidrug resistance
nonhuman
outcome assessment
risk factor
ward
bacteremia
clinical trial
epidemiology
long term care
microbiology
middle aged
multicenter study
prospective study
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial
Humans
Intensive Care Units
Long-Term Care
Prospective Studies
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Résumé
Background: Choice of empirically prescribed antimicrobials for sepsis management depends on epidemiological factors. The epidemiology of sepsis in Greece was studied in two large-periods.Methods: Sepsis due to bloodstream infections (BSI) from July 2006 until March 2013 was recorded in a multicenter study in 46 departments. Patients were divided into sepsis admitted in the emergencies and hospitalized in the general ward (GW) and sepsis developing after admission in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). The primary endpoints were the changes of epidemiology and the factors related with BSIs by multidrug-resistant (MDR) pathogens; the secondary endpoint was the impact of de-escalation on antimicrobial therapy.Results: 754 patients were studied; 378 from 2006-2009 and 376 from 2010-2013. Major differences were recorded between periods in the GW. They involved increase of: sepsis severity; the incidence of underlying diseases; the incidence of polymicrobial infections; the emergence of Klebsiella pneumoniae as a pathogen; and mortality. Factors independently related with BSI by MDR pathogens were chronic hemofiltration, intake of antibiotics the last three months and residence into long-term care facilities. De-escalation in BSIs by fully susceptible Gram-negatives did not affect final outcome. Similar epidemiological differences were not found in the ICU; MDR Gram-negatives predominated in both periods.Conclusions: The epidemiology of sepsis in Greece differs in the GW and in the ICU. De-escalation in the GW is a safe strategy. © 2014 Koupetori et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/29832
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