Risk Factors for Candidal Bloodstream Infections in Surgical Intensive Care Unit Patients: The NEMIS Prospective Multicenter Study
Author(s) -
Henry M. Blumberg,
William R. Jarvis,
J. Michael Soucie,
Jack Edwards,
Jan E. Patterson,
Michael A. Pfaller,
M. Sigfrido RangelFrausto,
Michael G. Rinaldi,
Lisa Saiman,
R. Todd Wiblin,
Richard P. Wenzel
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
clinical infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.44
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1537-6591
pISSN - 1058-4838
DOI - 10.1086/321811
Subject(s) - medicine , prospective cohort study , intensive care unit , relative risk , incidence (geometry) , central venous catheter , risk factor , intensive care , surgery , parenteral nutrition , intensive care medicine , catheter , confidence interval , physics , optics
To assess risk factors for development of candidal blood stream infections (CBSIs), a prospective cohort study was performed at 6 sites that involved all patients admitted to the surgical intensive care unit (SICU) for >48 h over a 2-year period. Among 4276 such patients, 42 CBSIs occurred (9.82 CBSIs per 1000 admissions). The overall incidence was 0.98 CBSIs per 1000 patient days and 1.42 per 1000 SICU days with a central venous catheter in place. In multivariate analysis, factors independently associated with increased risk of CBSI included prior surgery (relative risk [RR], 7.3), acute renal failure (RR, 4.2), receipt of parenteral nutrition (RR, 3.6), and, for patients who had undergone surgery, presence of a triple lumen catheter (RR, 5.4). Receipt of an antifungal agent was associated with decreased risk (RR, 0.3). Prospective clinical studies are needed to identify which antifungal agents are most protective and which high-risk patients will benefit from antifungal prophylaxis.
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