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Title: | Community-acquired respiratory coinfection in critically III patients with pandemic 2009 influenza A(H1N1) virus | Authors: | Martín-Loeches, Ignacio Sanchez-Corral, Ana Diaz, Emili Granada, Rosa María Zaragoza, Rafael Villavicencio, Christian Albaya, Antonio Cerdá, Enrique Catalán, Rosa María Luque, Pilar Paredes, Amparo Navarrete, Inés Rello, Jordi Rodríguez, Alejandro Cobo, Pedro Martins, Javier Carbayo, Cecilia Robles-Musso, Emilio Cárdenas, Antonio Fierro, Javier Fernández, Ocaña Sierra, Rafael Huertos, Ma Jesús Pozo, Juan Carlos Guerrero, Rafael Márquez, Enrique Rodríguez-Carvajal, Manuel Jareño, Antonio Pomares, José Ballesteros, José Luis Fernández, Yolanda Lobato, Francisco Prieto, José F. Albofedo-Sánchez, José Martínez, Pilar Castellanos, Miguel Angel Díaz Sevilla, Guillermo Garnacho-Montero, José Hinojosa, Rafael Fernández, Esteban Loza, Ana León, Cristóbal Arenzana, Angel Ocaña, Dolores Avellanas, Manuel Luis Lander, Arantxa De Arellano, S. Garrido Ramírez Lacueva, M. I.Marquina González, Ignacio Montón, Jose Ma Díaz, Jose Ma López-Reina, Pilar Sáez, Sergio Iglesias, Lisardo González, Carmen Pascual Quiroga García-Rodríguez, Águeda Socias, Lorenzo Ibánez, Pedro Borges-Sa, Marcío Socias, A. Del Castillo, A. Marcos, Ricard Jordà Bonell, José M. Amestarán, Ignacio Ruiz-Santana, Sergio Díaz, Juan José Sisón Hernández, David Trujillo, Ana Regalado, Luis Lorente, Leonardo Martín, Mar Martínez, Sergio Cáceres, J. J. Suberviola, Borja Ugarte, P. García-López, Fernando Alonso, Angel Álvaro Pasilla, Antonio Grande, Ma Luisa Gómez Canabal, Alfonso Marina, Luis Messa, Juan B.López Pueyo, Ma Jesús López Ferreras, Zulema Macias, Santiago Berezo, José Ángel Varela, Jesús Blanco Andaluz, Ojeda A. Terrero, Antonio Álvarez Ezpeleta, Fabiola Tena |
UNESCO Clasification: | 32 Ciencias médicas 242008 Virus respiratorios |
Keywords: | Infection Influenza A H1N1 |
Issue Date: | 2011 | Journal: | Chest (American College of Chest Physicians) | Abstract: | Background: Little is known about the impact of community-acquired respiratory coinfection in patients with pandemic 2009 influenza A(H1N1) virus infection. Methods: This was a prospective, observational, multicenter study conducted in 148 Spanish ICUs. Results: Severe respiratory syndrome was present in 645 ICU patients. Coinfection occurred in 113 (17.5%) of patients. Streptococcus pneumoniae (in 62 patients [54.8%]) was identified as the most prevalent bacteria. Patients with coinfection at ICU admission were older (47.5±15.7 vs 43.8±14.2 years, P<.05) and presented a higher APACHE (Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation) II score (16.1±7.3 vs 13.3±7.1, P<.05) and Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score (7.0±3.8 vs 5.2±3.5, P<.05). No differences in comorbidities were observed. Patients who had coinfection required vasopressors (63.7% vs 39.3%, P<.05) and invasive mechanical ventilation (69% vs 58.5%, P<.05) more frequently. ICU length of stay was 3 days longer in patients who had coinfection than in patients who did not (11 [interquartile range, 5-23] vs 8 [interquartile range 4-17], P=.01). Coinfection was associated with increased ICU mortality (26.2% vs 15.5%; OR, 1.94; 95% CI, 1.21-3.09), but Cox regression analysis adjusted by potential confounders did not confirm a significant association between coinfection and ICU mortality. Conclusions: During the 2009 pandemics, the role played by bacterial coinfection in bringing patients to the ICU was not clear, S pneumoniae being the most common pathogen. This work provides clear evidence that bacterial coinfection is a contributor to increased consumption of health resources by critical patients infected with the virus and is the virus that causes critical illness in the vast majority of cases. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10553/45950 | ISSN: | 0012-3692 | DOI: | 10.1378/chest.10-1396 | Source: | Chest [ISSN 0012-3692],v. 139, p. 555-562 |
Appears in Collections: | Artículos |
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