| Literature DB >> 20950442 |
Lutz E Lehmann1, Bernd Herpichboehm, Gerald J Kost, Marin H Kollef, Frank Stüber.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Delays in adequate antimicrobial treatment contribute to high cost and mortality in sepsis. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays are used alongside conventional cultures to accelerate the identification of microorganisms. We analyze the impact on medical outcomes and healthcare costs if improved adequacy of antimicrobial therapy is achieved by providing immediate coverage after positive PCR reports.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20950442 PMCID: PMC3219292 DOI: 10.1186/cc9294
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Parameters used to calculate cost impact and cost-effectiveness
| Parameter | Description | Unit | Value | Source | Used in equation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full cost per PCR test | € | 300 | Additional file | ||
| Days gainable on adequate treatment when utilizing PCR+ information | day | 2.78 = 80.5/29 | [ | ||
| Mean total duration of inadequate treatment (as observed in PCR+ episodes with 0.5 ≤ | day | 3.28 = 0.5 + DG | [ | ||
| Factor which translates days on earlier adequate treatment into outcome in terms of mean days reduced length of stay ( | - | 1.15 = 3.763 day/3.276 day | |||
| Incidence of inadequate treatment in the PCR+ group | - | 0.397 = 29/73 | Figure 1 | ||
| Mean # years survival of survivors of ICU sepsis, age cohort >60 c | yr | 5.43 b = 12.3 * 488/1105 | [ | ||
| Mortality rate of inadequately treated PCR+ patients | - | 0.414 = 12/29 | Figure 1 | ||
| Relative risk of non-survival (@ inadequate/adequate treatment) | - | 2.315 | [ | ||
| Share of episodes with at least 1 PCR+ microorganism | - | 0.330 = 73/221 | Table 2 | ||
| Time between PCR sampling and result reported (hours) | hr | 12 | [ | ||
| Health state utility after ICU sepsis | QALY/yr | 0.68 | [ |
a Not identical with time to positive blood culture, but linked to it in about 50% of contributing data
b LYgained (of survivors age >60, according to data from [26]); = LYgained (all included sepsis survivors)* ICER(all)/ICER(age >60) = 12.3 yr * 48,800 $/110,500 $ = 5.43 yr.
c We use the data for those aged >60 because the mean age in our subgroup with potential survival benefit (Table 3) is 69.1 yr.
€, Euro (European currency unit); QALY, quality-adjusted life year.
Underlying diagnoses and identification of clinically significant microorganisms in 221 ICU or surgical ward episodes (subset of data reported earlier [17])
| Totals | PCR + episodes | BC+ episodes | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| - Intra-abdominal sepsis | 87 | 31 | 0.36 | 22 | 0.25 |
| - Nosocomial pneumonia | 80 | 28 | 0.35 | 21 | 0.26 |
| - Community acquired pneumonia | 6 | 1 | 0.17 | 0 | 0 |
| - Multi-organ dysfunction syndrome | 7 | 4 | 0.57 | 4 | 0.57 |
| - Catheter related sepsis; post cardiac surgery | 45 | 18 | 0.40 | 9 | 0.20 |
| - Neutropenic fever | 15 | 5 | 0.33 | 2 | 0.13 |
| - Bone/joint infection | 9 | 4 | 0.44 | 0 | 0 |
| Other | 46 | 11 | 0.24 | 3 | 0.07 |
a underlying diagnoses do not add up to totals due to dual conditions
b at least one clinically significant microorganism retrieved in one PCR, respectively in any of several (as in standard of care) BC tests.
BC, blood culture (BC+: blood culture with clinically relevant microorganism identified, not counting contaminations that are immediately at reporting evident to the treating clinician); PCR, polymerase chain reaction (PCR+: PCR with clinically relevant microorganism identified. Note that in our study, all PCR+ reported microorganisms are considered clinically relevant.
Figure 1Modification of empiric antimicrobial treatment and microbiological characterization: Among 221 investigated sepsis episodes, 74 (33.5%) required modification of empiric antimicrobial treatment (upper circle). Positive blood cultures (lower right circle) triggered 27 (= 8 + 19) of these changes. Among 73 PCR+ episodes (lower left circle), 29 (= 10 + 19) allowed earlier adequate treatment (data from [17]). In brackets: Non-survivors within the respective groups.
Figure 2Impact from PCR testing. Diagrams for estimating impact from PCR testing in sepsis, based on incidence of modification of initial antimicrobial treatment (x-axis) and share of episodes with positive blood culture (curves): A: Cost-neutral application of PCR is predicted if the mean daily treatment cost of those included in PCR testing exceeds the break-even value on the y-axis (A). Data point from our study: 717 €, at 20% BC+ (Table 2) and 33.5% modification of empiric treatment (= 74/221, Figure 1). B: Cost per incremental survivor is predicted as indicated on the y-axis (B). Data point from our study: 11,477 €, at 20% BC+ and 33.5% modification of empiric treatment. Figure 2 was calculated using equation 4 (A) and equation 5 (B) with substitution terms as given in Additional data file 2.
Figure 3Predicted mortality reduction. Predicted mortality reduction if earlier adequate treatment is achieved in 29 of the 73 PCR+ episodes: A: Under adequate treatment, a 27.3% mortality is observed (= 12/(12 + 32)); IA: In the inadequately treated (IA) group, a mortality of 41.4% is observed (= 12/(12 + 17)); A*: A PCR+ based intervention should reduce the mortality in the former IA group according to equation 5 and the reduced relative risk of dying, RR† (from [3,4]). We predict that 5 of the 12 (Table 3) non-survivors might have survived if the PCR+ results were interventionally used. The resulting mortality of 26.0% (= (12 + 7)/73) is comparable to the mortality observed under adequate treatment (A).
Characteristics of 12 non-survivors observed in 29 inadequately treated PCR+ patients
| Age | Co-morbidity | Infectious focus | PCR+ pathogen a | # days gainable b | Evidence for PCR+ relevance c | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BC+ | Other test | |||||
| 74 | Pleural lesion | Peritonitis | 4 | |||
| 79 | Decompensated heart (right side) | Cholangitis | 7 | Bile- duct cul+ | ||
| 66 | Liver transplantation | Peritonitis | 4 | Tracheal swab cul+ | ||
| 77 | Hemodialysis | Catheter-related | CoNS d | 2 | CoNS (2×) | Pos. tracheal swab cul+ |
| 47 | Trauma | Pneumonia | CoNS d | 2 | CoNS, | Catheter-tip CoNS+ |
| 55 | Poly-trauma | Abdominal (late detected) | 7 | |||
| 62 | Cardiothoracic surgery | Pneumonia; unclear: 2nd focus | 2 | MRSA+ (3×) | Thorax, sternum cul+ | |
| 58 | Artherosklerosis | Pneumonia | 2.5 | - | Bronchial aspirate cul+ | |
| 78 | Rectal neo-plasm; perforat-ed abscess | Intra-abdominal | 1.5 | |||
| 85 | Cardiac surgery | Pneumonia | 3 | |||
| 71 | Bypass surgery | Pneumonia | 3 | |||
| 77 | Cardiac surgery | Pneumonia | 5 | |||
a Insufficiently empirically covered PCR+ microorganisms, and (concurrent other PCR+ microorganism).
b Days gainable on early adequate coverage if the PCR+ information is utilized.
c Main evidence is the clinical course associated with antimicrobial treatments. In the columns below we report other laboratory findings that suggested drug changes equivalent to those PCR could have triggered earlier (see column #days gainable).
d in PCR+: above manufacturer cut-off for CoNS.
BC+, blood culture with clinically relevant microorganism identified, not counting contaminations that are immediately at reporting evident to the treating clinician; CoNS, coagulase-negative Staphylococcus; cul+, microorganisms found in cultures of specimen other than positive cultures; MRSA, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus; PCR, polymerase chain reaction (PCR+: PCR with clinically relevant microorganism identified. Note that in our study, all PCR+ reported microorganisms are considered clinically relevant