| Literature DB >> 24148135 |
Michelle N D Balm, Andrew A Lover, Sharon Salmon, Paul A Tambyah, Dale A Fisher1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients newly colonised with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) are at higher risk of clinical MRSA infection. At present, there are limited data on the duration or magnitude of this risk in a hospital population with a known time of MRSA acquisition.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24148135 PMCID: PMC4015767 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-13-491
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1Study design. Study design and distribution of study population.
Demographic and clinical characteristics of colonised (n=716) and infected patients (n=121)
| | | | | | | |
| 83 | (11.5%) | 7 | (5.8%) | 90 | (10.7%) | |
| 209 | (29.1%) | 30 | (24.8%) | 239 | (28.5%) | |
| 298 | (41.4%) | 65 | (53.7%) | 363 | (43.2%) | |
| 129 | (17.9%) | 19 | (15.7%) | 148 | (17.6%) | |
| | | | | | | |
| 460 | (64.0%) | 86 | (71.1%) | 546 | (65.0%) | |
| 259 | (36.0%) | 35 | (28.9%) | 294 | (35.0%) | |
| | | | | | | |
| 485 | (67.5%) | 85 | (70.2%) | 570 | (67.9%) | |
| 131 | (18.2%) | 20 | (16.5%) | 151 | (18.0%) | |
| 65 | (9.0%) | 11 | (9.1%) | 76 | (9.0%) | |
| 38 | (5.3%) | 5 | (4.1%) | 43 | (5.1%) | |
| | | | | | | |
| 233 | (32.4%) | 45 | (37.2%) | 278 | (33.1%) | |
| 66 | (9.2%) | 18 | (14.9%) | 84 | (10.0%) | |
| 246 | (34.2%) | 49 | (40.5%) | 295 | (35.1%) | |
| 91 | (12.7%) | 2 | (1.7%) | 93 | (11.1%) | |
| | | | | | | |
| 350 | (48.7%) | 71 | (58.7%) | 421 | (50.1%) | |
| 325 | (45.2%) | 67 | (55.4%) | 392 | (46.7%) | |
| 237 | (33.0%) | 50 | (41.3%) | 287 | (34.2%) | |
| | | | | | | |
| 33 | (4.6%) | 20 | (16.5%) | 53 | (6.3%) | |
| 90 | (12.5%) | 35 | (28.9%) | 125 | (14.9%) | |
Figure 2Kaplan-Meier estimates of clinical MRSA infection from time of colonization (months) (n=840). Kaplan-Meier estimate showing proportion of patients with clinical MRSA infection shown at six-monthly time intervals.
Risk factors for clinical infection (n=840) (Outcome defined as MRSA-positive clinical infection)
| | | | |
| ≤ 39 | 1.0 (ref) | 1.0 (ref) | - |
| 40-59 | 1.70 (0.72 – 4.03) | 1.85 (0.78 – 4.40) | 0.163 |
| 60-79 | |||
| 80 + | 1.75 (0.70 – 4.33) | 2.15 (0.85 – 5.45) | 0.106 |
| | | | |
| Male | 1.0 (ref) | 1.0 (ref) | - |
| Female | 0.73 (0.47 – 1.10) | 0.67 (0.43 – 1.03) | 0.066 |
| | | | |
| Chinese | 1.0 (ref) | 1.0 (ref) | - |
| Malay | 0.87 (0.52 - 1.47) | 0.93 (0.54 -1.60) | 0.799 |
| Indian | 0.97 (0.49 - 1.90) | 1.01 (0.51 – 2.04) | 0.959 |
| Other | 0.75 (0.29 - 1.96) | 0.86 (0.32 - 2.31) | 0.772 |
| | | | |
| Immunosuppression |
Bolded entries are significant at p < 0.05.
Risk factors for mortality (n=840) (Outcome defined as all-cause mortality)
| | | | | |
| Clinical MRSA | ||||
| | | | | |
| ≤ 39 | 1.0 (ref) | - | 1.0 (ref) | - |
| 40-59 | 0.61 (0.11 – 3.52) | 0.584 | 2.28 (0.50 – 10.34) | 0.285 |
| 60-79 | 1.91 (0.40 – 9.06) | 0.417 | ||
| 80 + | 2.53 (0.50 – 12.74) | 0.260 | ||
| | | | | |
| Male | 1.0 (ref) | - | 1.0 (ref) | - |
| Female | 0.98 (0.63 – 1.51) | 0.919 | ||
| | | | | |
| Chinese | 1.0 (ref) | - | 1.0 (ref) | - |
| Malay | 0.39 (0.13 – 1.18) | 0.096 | 0.55 (0.27 – 1.11) | 0.096 |
| Indian | 1.03 (0.32 – 3.30) | 0.964 | 0.97 (0.46 to 2.08) | 0.936 |
| Other | 0.46 (0.05 – 4.04) | 0.479 | 0.42 (0.09 – 1.85) | 0.251 |
| | | | | |
| Malignancy | ||||
| Immunosuppression | NS | NS | ||
| | | | | |
| Surgery ≤ 30 days | ||||
| ICU | 2.50 (0.98 - 6.39) | 0.055 | NS | NS |
| CVC | ||||
Bolded entries are significant at p < 0.05.