Epidemiology of intra-abdominal infection and sepsis in critically ill patients: “AbSeS”, a multinational observational cohort study and ESICM Trials Group Project Academic Article

journal

  • Intensive Care Medicine

abstract

  • Purpose: To describe the epidemiology of intra-abdominal infection in an international cohort of ICU patients according to a new system that classifies cases according to setting of infection acquisition (community-acquired, early onset hospital-acquired, and late-onset hospital-acquired), anatomical disruption (absent or present with localized or diffuse peritonitis), and severity of disease expression (infection, sepsis, and septic shock). Methods: We performed a multicenter (n = 309), observational, epidemiological study including adult ICU patients diagnosed with intra-abdominal infection. Risk factors for mortality were assessed by logistic regression analysis. Results: The cohort included 2621 patients. Setting of infection acquisition was community-acquired in 31.6percent-flag-change, early onset hospital-acquired in 25percent-flag-change, and late-onset hospital-acquired in 43.4percent-flag-change of patients. Overall prevalence of antimicrobial resistance was 26.3percent-flag-change and difficult-to-treat resistant Gram-negative bacteria 4.3percent-flag-change, with great variation according to geographic region. No difference in prevalence of antimicrobial resistance was observed according to setting of infection acquisition. Overall mortality was 29.1percent-flag-change. Independent risk factors for mortality included late-onset hospital-acquired infection, diffuse peritonitis, sepsis, septic shock, older age, malnutrition, liver failure, congestive heart failure, antimicrobial resistance (either methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, vancomycin-resistant enterococci, extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Gram-negative bacteria, or carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative bacteria) and source control failure evidenced by either the need for surgical revision or persistent inflammation. Conclusion: This multinational, heterogeneous cohort of ICU patients with intra-abdominal infection revealed that setting of infection acquisition, anatomical disruption, and severity of disease expression are disease-specific phenotypic characteristics associated with outcome, irrespective of the type of infection. Antimicrobial resistance is equally common in community-acquired as in hospital-acquired infection.

authors

publication date

  • 2019-12-1

edition

  • 45

keywords

  • Carbapenems
  • Cohort Studies
  • Community-Acquired Infections
  • Critical Illness
  • Cross Infection
  • Epidemiologic Studies
  • Epidemiology
  • Gram-Negative Bacteria
  • Heart Failure
  • Infections
  • Inflammation
  • Intraabdominal Infections
  • Liver Failure
  • Logistic Models
  • Malnutrition
  • Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus
  • Mortality
  • Observational Studies
  • Peritonitis
  • Regression Analysis
  • Reoperation
  • Sepsis
  • Septic Shock
  • Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococci
  • beta-Lactamases

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 0342-4642

number of pages

  • 15

start page

  • 1703

end page

  • 1717