| Literature DB >> 23388032 |
Charis Marwick1, Virginia Hernandez Santiago, Colin McCowan, Janice Broomhall, Peter Davey.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Residents of care homes are at risk of colonisation and infection with antibiotic resistant bacteria, but there is little evidence that antibiotic resistance among such patients is associated with worse outcomes than among older people living in their own homes. Our aim was to compare the prevalence of antibiotic resistant bacteria and clinical outcomes in older patients admitted to hospital with acute infections from care homes versus their own homes.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23388032 PMCID: PMC3574846 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2318-13-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Demographic details, infection site and microbiological isolates
| No. of patients | 101 | 60 | | 161 |
| Age (years): 65-69 | 18 (18%) | 6 (10%) | 0.002 | 24 (15%) |
| 70-79 | 44 (44%) | 12 (20%) | | 56 (35%) |
| 80-89 | 31 (31%) | 34 (57%) | | 65 (40%) |
| 90+ | 8 (8%) | 8 (13%) | | 16 (10%) |
| Male gender | 49 (49%) | 25 (42%) | 0.399 | 74 (46%) |
| Charlson Index*: 0 | 24 (24%) | 9 (15%) | 0.048 | 33 (20%) |
| 1-2 | 61 (60%) | 32 (53%) | | 93 (58%) |
| 3+ | 16 (16%) | 19 (32%) | | 35 (22%) |
| Site of infection ** | | | | |
| LRTI | 29 (29%) | 13 (22%) | 0.199 | 42 (26%) |
| SSTI | 20 (20%) | 12 (20%) | | 32 (20%) |
| UTI | 24 (24%) | 20 (33%) | | 44 (27%) |
| Other | 23 (23%) | 8 (13%) | | 31 (19%) |
| Multiple | 5 (5%) | 7 (12%) | | 12 (7%) |
| Microbiological isolates | | | | |
| No. of patients | 22 | 23 | | 45 |
| 11 (50%) | 12 (52%) | 0.884 | 23 (51%) | |
| MRSA | 4 (18%) | 10 (43%) | 0.067 | 14 (31%) |
| Gram negative | 10 (45%) | 12 (52%) | 0.652 | 22 (49%) |
| Resistant Gram negative *** | 4 (18%) | 8 (35%) | 0.208 | 12 (27%) |
| Any resistant organism | 8 (36%) | 16 (70%) | 0.026 | 24 (53%) |
| Resistant to initial therapy | 8 (36%) | 13 (57%) | 0.175 | 21 (47%) |
*Charlson Index of comorbidity [7].
**LRTI, lower respiratory infection; SSTI, skin and soft tissue infection; UTI, urinary tract infection; Other infections include intra-abdominal infections, bone/joint infections, and bacteraemia with undefined source.
***Resistant Gram negative bacteria were resistant to cefuroxime, co-amoxiclav or ciprofloxacin. Two patients had both MRSA and resistant Gram negative bacteria.
Odds ratios with 95% CI and p-values for 30 day mortality by variable*
| | ||
|---|---|---|
| Own home ( | 1.38 (0.67 - 2.82, p = 0.384) | 1.01 (0.40 - 2.52, p = 0.984) |
| Sepsis ( | 1.85 (0.74 - 4.64, p = 0.192) | 1.75 (0.67 - 4.59, p = 0.254) |
| Severe sepsis ( | 8.60 (3.21 - 23.02, p < 0.001) | 10.09 (3.37 - 30.19, p < 0.001) |
| Any resistant organism ( | 1.89 (0.76 - 4.72, p = 0.172) | 2.10 (0.26 - 16.77, p = 0.486) |
| Resistant to initial therapy ( | 1.92 (0.73 - 5.02, p = 0.184) | 0.64 (0.07 - 5.85, p = 0.696 |
*Patients aged 90+ were at greater risk of 30 day mortality than the youngest age group but otherwise there was no significant effect of age, gender or co-morbidity.