Nosocomial candidemia; risk factors and prognosis revisited; 11 years experience from a Norwegian secondary hospital.

The aim of the study was to review the epidemiology and prognosis of candidemia in a secondary hospital, and to examine the intra-hospital distribution of candidemia patients. Study design is a retrospective cohort study. Trough 2002-2012, 110 cases of candidemia were diagnosed, giving an incidence...

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Main Authors: Jan-Erik Berdal, Rolf Haagensen, Trond Ranheim, Jørgen V Bjørnholt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4117589?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d5115f25e6314f67be9198ba32807cc62020-11-25T01:11:57ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0197e10391610.1371/journal.pone.0103916Nosocomial candidemia; risk factors and prognosis revisited; 11 years experience from a Norwegian secondary hospital.Jan-Erik BerdalRolf HaagensenTrond RanheimJørgen V BjørnholtThe aim of the study was to review the epidemiology and prognosis of candidemia in a secondary hospital, and to examine the intra-hospital distribution of candidemia patients. Study design is a retrospective cohort study. Trough 2002-2012, 110 cases of candidemia were diagnosed, giving an incidence of 2, 6/100,000 citizens/year. Overall prognosis of candidemia was dismal, with a 30 days case fatality rate of 49% and one year case fatality rate of 64%. Candidemia was a terminal event in 55% of 30 days non-survivors, defined as Candida blood cultures reported positive on the day of death or thereafter (39%), or treatment refrained due to hopeless short-term prognosis (16%). In terminal event candidemias, advanced or incurable cancer was present in 29%. Non-survivors at 30 days were 9 years (median) older than survivors. In 30 days survivors, candidemia was not recognised before discharge in 13% of cases. No treatment were given and no deaths or complications were observed in this group. Candidemia patients were grouped into 8 patient categories: Abdominal surgery (35%), urology (13%), other surgery (11%), pneumonia (13%), haematological malignancy (7%), intravenous drug abuse (4%), other medical (15%), and new-borns (3%). Candidemia was diagnosed while admitted in the ICU in 46% of patients. Urology related cases were all diagnosed in the general ward. Multiple surgical procedures were done in 60% of abdominal surgery patients. Antibiotics were administered prior to candidemia in 87% of patients, with median duration 17 (1-108) days. Neutropenia was less common than expected in patients with candidemia (8/105) and closely associated to haematological malignancy (6/8). Compared with previous national figures the epidemiology of invasive candidiasis seems not to have changed over the last decade.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4117589?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jan-Erik Berdal
Rolf Haagensen
Trond Ranheim
Jørgen V Bjørnholt
spellingShingle Jan-Erik Berdal
Rolf Haagensen
Trond Ranheim
Jørgen V Bjørnholt
Nosocomial candidemia; risk factors and prognosis revisited; 11 years experience from a Norwegian secondary hospital.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jan-Erik Berdal
Rolf Haagensen
Trond Ranheim
Jørgen V Bjørnholt
author_sort Jan-Erik Berdal
title Nosocomial candidemia; risk factors and prognosis revisited; 11 years experience from a Norwegian secondary hospital.
title_short Nosocomial candidemia; risk factors and prognosis revisited; 11 years experience from a Norwegian secondary hospital.
title_full Nosocomial candidemia; risk factors and prognosis revisited; 11 years experience from a Norwegian secondary hospital.
title_fullStr Nosocomial candidemia; risk factors and prognosis revisited; 11 years experience from a Norwegian secondary hospital.
title_full_unstemmed Nosocomial candidemia; risk factors and prognosis revisited; 11 years experience from a Norwegian secondary hospital.
title_sort nosocomial candidemia; risk factors and prognosis revisited; 11 years experience from a norwegian secondary hospital.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description The aim of the study was to review the epidemiology and prognosis of candidemia in a secondary hospital, and to examine the intra-hospital distribution of candidemia patients. Study design is a retrospective cohort study. Trough 2002-2012, 110 cases of candidemia were diagnosed, giving an incidence of 2, 6/100,000 citizens/year. Overall prognosis of candidemia was dismal, with a 30 days case fatality rate of 49% and one year case fatality rate of 64%. Candidemia was a terminal event in 55% of 30 days non-survivors, defined as Candida blood cultures reported positive on the day of death or thereafter (39%), or treatment refrained due to hopeless short-term prognosis (16%). In terminal event candidemias, advanced or incurable cancer was present in 29%. Non-survivors at 30 days were 9 years (median) older than survivors. In 30 days survivors, candidemia was not recognised before discharge in 13% of cases. No treatment were given and no deaths or complications were observed in this group. Candidemia patients were grouped into 8 patient categories: Abdominal surgery (35%), urology (13%), other surgery (11%), pneumonia (13%), haematological malignancy (7%), intravenous drug abuse (4%), other medical (15%), and new-borns (3%). Candidemia was diagnosed while admitted in the ICU in 46% of patients. Urology related cases were all diagnosed in the general ward. Multiple surgical procedures were done in 60% of abdominal surgery patients. Antibiotics were administered prior to candidemia in 87% of patients, with median duration 17 (1-108) days. Neutropenia was less common than expected in patients with candidemia (8/105) and closely associated to haematological malignancy (6/8). Compared with previous national figures the epidemiology of invasive candidiasis seems not to have changed over the last decade.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4117589?pdf=render
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