Hospital-onset bacteraemia and fungaemia as a novel automated surveillance indicator: results from four European university hospitals, 2018 to 2022.

IF 9.9 2区 医学 Q1 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Seven Js Aghdassi, Suzanne D van der Werff, Gaud Catho, Manon Brekelmans, Luis A Peña Diaz, Niccolò Buetti, Ferenc D Rüther, Daniel Teixeira, Daniel Sjöholm, Pontus Nauclér, Michael Behnke, Maaike Sm van Mourik
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Abstract

BACKGROUNDConventional manual surveillance of healthcare-associated infections is labour-intensive and therefore often restricted to areas with high-risk patients. Fully automated surveillance of hospital-onset bacteraemia and fungaemia (HOB) may facilitate hospital-wide surveillance.AIMTo develop an algorithm and minimal dataset (MDS) required for automated surveillance of HOB and apply it to real-life routine data in four European hospitalsMETHODSThrough consensus discussion, a HOB definition with MDS suitable for automated surveillance was developed and applied in a retrospective multicentre observational study including all adult patients admitted to hospitals in the Netherlands, Germany, Sweden and Switzerland (2018-22). Annual HOB rates were calculated per 1,000 patient days for hospital, intensive care unit (ICU) and non-ICU settings.RESULTSHOB was defined as a positive blood culture with a recognised pathogen 2 or more days after hospital admission. For common commensals, two blood cultures with the same commensal within 2 days were required. HOB rates were comparable between the four hospitals (1.0-2.2/1,000 patient days). HOB rates were substantially higher in ICU than non-ICU settings, and HOB with common commensals accounted for 14.8-28.2% of all HOB. HOB rates per 1,000 patient days were consistent over time, but higher in 2020-21. HOB caused by Staphylococcus aureus comprised 8.4-16.0% of all HOB.CONCLUSIONAutomated HOB surveillance using a common definition was feasible and reproducible across four European hospitals. Future studies should investigate clinical relevance and preventability of HOB, and focus on strategies to make the automated HOB metric an actionable infection control tool.

医院发生的菌血症和真菌血症作为一种新的自动监测指标:来自欧洲四所大学医院的结果,2018年至2022年。
背景:传统的卫生保健相关感染的人工监测是劳动密集型的,因此通常仅限于高风险患者的地区。医院发病菌血症和真菌血症(HOB)的全自动监测可以促进医院范围内的监测。目的:开发HOB自动监测所需的算法和最小数据集(MDS),并将其应用于四家欧洲医院的现实生活常规数据。方法:通过共识讨论,开发了适合自动监测的HOB定义和MDS,并在一项回顾性多中心观察研究中应用,该研究包括荷兰、德国、瑞典和瑞士医院的所有成年患者(2018-22)。医院、重症监护病房(ICU)和非重症监护病房的年度HOB率按每1,000个病人日计算。结果shob定义为入院后2天或更长时间血培养阳性,具有公认的病原体。对于普通共生菌,需要在2天内进行两次具有相同共生菌的血培养。四家医院之间的HOB率具有可比性(1.0-2.2/ 1000病人日)。ICU病房的HOB率明显高于非ICU病房,共有群落的HOB占所有HOB的14.8-28.2%。每1000个病人日的HOB率随着时间的推移是一致的,但在2020-21年更高。金黄色葡萄球菌引起的HOB占全部HOB的8.4-16.0%。结论采用统一定义的HOB自动监测在欧洲四家医院是可行且可重复的。未来的研究应探讨HOB的临床相关性和可预防性,并重点研究使HOB自动化指标成为可操作的感染控制工具的策略。
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来源期刊
Eurosurveillance
Eurosurveillance INFECTIOUS DISEASES-
CiteScore
32.70
自引率
2.10%
发文量
430
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Eurosurveillance is a European peer-reviewed journal focusing on the epidemiology, surveillance, prevention, and control of communicable diseases relevant to Europe.It is a weekly online journal, with 50 issues per year published on Thursdays. The journal includes short rapid communications, in-depth research articles, surveillance reports, reviews, and perspective papers. It excels in timely publication of authoritative papers on ongoing outbreaks or other public health events. Under special circumstances when current events need to be urgently communicated to readers for rapid public health action, e-alerts can be released outside of the regular publishing schedule. Additionally, topical compilations and special issues may be provided in PDF format.
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