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Appropriate empirical antibiotic use and 30-d mortality in cirrhotic patients with bacteremia
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Baishideng Publishing Group Inc, 2015.
-
Abstract
- AIM: To analyze whether prompt and appropriate empirical antibiotic (AEA) use is associated with mortality in cirrhotic patients with bacteremia. METHODS: A total of 102 episodes of bacteremia in 72 patients with cirrhosis were analyzed. AEA was defined as a using or starting an antibiotic appropriate to the isolated pathogen at the time of bacteremia. The primary endpoint was 30-d mortality. RESULTS: The mortality rate at 30 d was 30.4% (31/102 episodes). Use of AEA was associated with better survival at 30 d (76.5% vs 46.9%, P = 0.05), and inappropriate empirical antibiotic (IEA) use was an independent factor associated with increased mortality (OR = 3.24; 95%CI: 1.50-7.00; P = 0.003, adjusted for age, sex, Child-Pugh Class, gastrointestinal bleeding, presence of septic shock). IEA use was more frequent when the isolated pathogen was a multiresistant pathogen, and when infection was healthcare-related or hospital-acquired. CONCLUSION: AEA use was associated with increased survival of cirrhotic patients who developed bacteremia. Strategies for AEA use, tailored according to the local epidemiological patterns, are needed to improve survival of cirrhotic patients with bacteremia.
- Subjects :
- Liver Cirrhosis
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Gastrointestinal bleeding
Time Factors
medicine.drug_class
Antibiotics
Bacteremia
Inappropriate Prescribing
Kaplan-Meier Estimate
Microbial Sensitivity Tests
Retrospective Study
Predictive Value of Tests
Risk Factors
Internal medicine
Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial
medicine
Clinical endpoint
Odds Ratio
Humans
Intensive care medicine
Aged
Proportional Hazards Models
Retrospective Studies
Proportional hazards model
Septic shock
business.industry
Mortality rate
Gastroenterology
General Medicine
Odds ratio
Middle Aged
medicine.disease
bacterial infections and mycoses
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Treatment Outcome
Multivariate Analysis
lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins)
Female
business
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d0d2f0c170bbde27a4f058207da3130f