Projects

Epidemiology and outcomes of hospital-acquired bloodstream infections in intensive care unit patients: the EUROBACT-2 international cohort study

Groups and Associations Alexis Tabah 1 2 3 4, Niccolò Buetti 5 6, Quentin Staiquly 7, Stéphane Ruckly 6 7, Murat Akova 8, Abdullah Tarik Aslan 9, Marc Leone 10, Andrew Conway Morris 11 12 13, Matteo Bassetti 14, Kostoula Arvaniti 15, Jeffrey Lipman 16 17 18, Ricard Ferrer 19, Haibo Qiu 20, José-Artur Paiva 21 22 23, Pedro Povoa 24 25 26, Liesbet De Bus 27, Jan De Waele 28 29, Farid Zand 30, Mohan Gurjar 31, Adel Alsisi 32 33, Khalid Abidi 34, Hendrik Bracht 35, Yoshiro Hayashi 36, Kyeongman Jeon 37, Muhammed Elhadi 38, François Barbier 39, Jean-François Timsit 40 41; EUROBACT-2 Study Group, ESICM, ESCMID ESGCIP and the OUTCOMEREA Network
intensive care medicine 2023

Purpose: In the critically ill, hospital-acquired bloodstream infections (HA-BSI) are associated with significant mortality. Granular data are required for optimizing management, and developing guidelines and clinical trials.

Methods: We carried out a prospective international cohort study of adult patients (≥ 18 years of age) with HA-BSI treated in intensive care units (ICUs) between June 2019 and February 2021.

Results: 2600 patients from 333 ICUs in 52 countries were included. 78% HA-BSI were ICU-acquired. Median Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score was 8 [IQR 5; 11] at HA-BSI diagnosis. Most frequent sources of infection included pneumonia (26.7%) and intravascular catheters (26.4%). Most frequent pathogens were Gram-negative bacteria (59.0%), predominantly Klebsiella spp. (27.9%), Acinetobacter spp. (20.3%), Escherichia coli (15.8%), and Pseudomonas spp. (14.3%). Carbapenem resistance was present in 37.8%, 84.6%, 7.4%, and 33.2%, respectively. Difficult-to-treat resistance (DTR) was present in 23.5% and pan-drug resistance in 1.5%. Antimicrobial therapy was deemed adequate within 24 h for 51.5%. Antimicrobial resistance was associated with longer delays to adequate antimicrobial therapy. Source control was needed in 52.5% but not achieved in 18.2%. Mortality was 37.1%, and only 16.1% had been discharged alive from hospital by day-28.

Conclusions: HA-BSI was frequently caused by Gram-negative, carbapenem-resistant and DTR pathogens. Antimicrobial resistance led to delays in adequate antimicrobial therapy. Mortality was high, and at day-28 only a minority of the patients were discharged alive from the hospital. Prevention of antimicrobial resistance and focusing on adequate antimicrobial therapy and source control are important to optimize patient management and outcomes.

Keywords: antibiotic resistance; bacteremia; bloodstream infection; hospital-acquired.

Book