Anestezjologia Intensywna Terapia

Abstract

2/2020 vol. 52
Original paper

Among sepsis survivors, readmissions due to infections occur sooner and are associated with increased mortality

  1. Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, WellStar Health System, Marietta, GA, United States
  2. Department of Critical Care Medicine, Memorial Healthcare System, Hollywood, FL, United States
  3. Department of Critical Care, Mount Sinai Medical Center, Miami Beach, FL, United States
Anestezjologia Intensywna Terapia 2020; 52, 2: 105–109
Online publish date: 2020/07/26
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Background

Readmissions after sepsis hospitalisations are more likely to result in death compared to readmissions after non-sepsis hospitalisations.

Material and methods

Retrospective study of one hundred and forty-seven intensive care unit survivors of severe sepsis.

Results

Over a median follow-up of 565 (200–953) days, 88 patients (59.8%) were readmitted, 40 with an infectious process (45.4%) and 48 with a non-infectious condition (54.5%). Median time to first rehospitalisation for the entire cohort was 89 (19–337) days; patients admitted with an infectious cause were readmitted sooner; 65.7 (11–201) days vs. 144 (52.3–383) days, P = 0.02. Most cases of infectious readmissions were due to pneumonia (17 patients, 42.5%), and urinary tract infections (UTI) (7 patients, 17.5%). Survival rate was 45% (18/40) in those readmitted with an infectious process vs. 70.8% (34/48) in those readmitted due to a non-infectious cause, P = 0.01. In multivariate analyses, age (HR 1.04 [95% CI: 1.01–1.08]; P = 0.002) and infectious cause of readmission (HR 2.0 [95% CI: 1.005–4]; P = 0.04) remained associated with increased mortality.

Conclusions

Among sepsis survivors, infections are associated with shorter time to hospital readmission and higher mortality vs non-infectious causes. Most of the infectious readmissions were due to pneumonia or UTI, which mirrored the index hospitalisations.

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