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Title: | Risk Factors for Treatment Failure and Mortality Among Hospitalized Patients With Complicated Urinary Tract Infection: A Multicenter Retrospective Cohort Study (RESCUING Study Group) | Authors: | Eliakim-Raz, Noa Babitch, Tanya Shaw, Evelyn Addy, Ibironke Wiegand, Irith Vank, Christiane Vallejo Torres, Laura Joan-Miquel, Vigo Steve, Morris Grier, Sally Stoddart, Margaret Nienke, Cuperus Leo, Van den Huevel Vuong, Cuong MacGowan, Alasdair Carratala, Jordi Leibovici, Leonard Pujol, Miquel Tancheva, D Vatcheva-Dobrevska, R Tsiodras, S Roilides, E Varkonyi, I Bodnar, J Farkas, A Zak-Doron, Y Carmeli, Y Mangoni, ED Mussini, C Petrosillo, N Vata, A Hristea, A Origuen, J Rodriguez-Bano, J ArzuYetkin Saltoglu, N |
UNESCO Clasification: | 32 Ciencias médicas 320505 Enfermedades infecciosas |
Keywords: | Complicated urinary tract infection Pyelonephritis Risk factors Treatment failure Bacterial resistance |
Issue Date: | 2019 | Journal: | Clinical Infectious Diseases | Abstract: | Background. Complicated urinary tract infections (cUTIs) are responsible for a major share of all antibiotic consumption in hospitals. We aim to describe risk factors for treatment failure and mortality among patients with cUTIs. Methods. A multinational, multicentre retrospective cohort study, conducted in 20 countries in Europe and the Middle East. Data were collected from patients' files on hospitalised patients with a diagnosis of cUTI during 2013-2014. Primary outcome was treatment failure, secondary outcomes included 30 days all-cause mortality,among other outcomes. Multivariable analysis using a logistic model and the hospital as a random variable was performed to identify independent predictors for these outcomes. Results. A total of 981 patients with cUTI were included. Treatment failure was observed in 26.6% (261/981), all cause 30-day mortality rate was 8.7% (85/976), most of these in patients with catheter related UTI (CaUTI). Risk factors for treatment failure in multivariable analysis were ICU admission (OR 5.07, 95% CI 3.18-8.07), septic shock (OR 1.92, 95% CI 0.93-3.98), corticosteroid treatment (OR 1.92, 95% CI 1.12-3.54), bedridden (OR 2.11, 95%CI 1.4-3.18), older age (OR 1.02, 95% CI 1.0071.03-), metastatic cancer (OR 2.89, 95% CI 1.46-5.73) and CaUTI (OR 1.48, 95% CI 1.04-2.11). Management variables, such as inappropriate empirical antibiotic treatment or days to starting antibiotics were not associated with treatment failure or 30-day mortality. More patients with pyelonephritis were given appropriate empirical antibiotic therapy than other CaUTI [110/171; 64.3% vs. 116/270; 43%, p <0.005], nevertheless, this afforded no advantage in treatment failure rates nor mortality in these patients. Conclusions. In patients with cUTI we found no benefit of early appropriate empirical treatment on survival rates or other outcomes. Physicians might consider supportive treatment and watchful waiting in stable patients until the causative pathogen is defined. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10553/121279 | ISSN: | 1058-4838 | DOI: | 10.1093/cid/ciy418 | Source: | Clinical Infectious Diseases [ISSN 1058-4838], v. 68 (1), p. 29-36, (Enero 2019) |
Appears in Collections: | Artículos |
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