| Literature DB >> 21763093 |
Vered Schechner1, Tamar Gottesman, Orna Schwartz, Maya Korem, Yasmin Maor, Galia Rahav, Rivka Karplus, Tsipora Lazarovitch, Eyal Braun, Renato Finkelstein, Tamar Lachish, Yonit Wiener-Well, Danny Alon, Michal Chowers, Rita Bardenstein, Oren Zimhony, Alona Paz, Israel Potasman, Michael Giladi, Mitchell J Schwaber, Shiri Klarfeld-Lidji, Meirav Hochman, Dror Marchaim, Yehuda Carmeli.
Abstract
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an uncommon cause of bacteremia upon hospital admission (UHA) and the chosen empirical antimicrobial therapy may not cover it appropriately. In a multicenter prospective study conducted in Israel, we evaluated risk factors for in-hospital mortality in patients with P. aeruginosa bacteremia UHA and determined the influence of delay in adequate empirical antimicrobial therapy on patients' outcome. Seventy-six adult patients with P. aeruginosa bacteremia within 72 h of hospital admission were included. Demographic, clinical, and treatment data were collected. Microbiological adequacy of empirical therapy was determined. Severe sepsis or septic shock at admission (OR, 21.9; P < 0.001), respiratory or unknown sources of bacteremia (OR, 11.5; P = 0.003), recent hospitalization (OR, 6.2; P = 0.032), and poor functional status (OR, 5.8; P = 0.029) were identified as independent predictors of mortality. Inadequate empirical antimicrobial therapy was marginally associated with increased mortality only among patients who presented with severe sepsis or septic shock (P = 0.051).Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21763093 DOI: 10.1016/j.diagmicrobio.2011.05.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Microbiol Infect Dis ISSN: 0732-8893 Impact factor: 2.803