This document analyzes surveillance data from a medical intensive care unit to examine the epidemiology of clinical sepsis. Of 113 episodes of primary bloodstream infection (BSI), 33 (29%) were microbiologically documented while 80 (71%) were cases of clinical sepsis. The overall BSI rate was 19.8 per 1,000 central line days, but fell to 5.8 per 1,000 central line days when only microbiologically confirmed cases were considered. Exposure to vascular devices was similar between patients with clinical sepsis and microbiologically confirmed BSI. The study concludes that surveillance based only on laboratory data would underestimate the true incidence of BSI.
This document analyzes surveillance data from a medical intensive care unit to examine the epidemiology of clinical sepsis. Of 113 episodes of primary bloodstream infection (BSI), 33 (29%) were microbiologically documented while 80 (71%) were cases of clinical sepsis. The overall BSI rate was 19.8 per 1,000 central line days, but fell to 5.8 per 1,000 central line days when only microbiologically confirmed cases were considered. Exposure to vascular devices was similar between patients with clinical sepsis and microbiologically confirmed BSI. The study concludes that surveillance based only on laboratory data would underestimate the true incidence of BSI.
This document analyzes surveillance data from a medical intensive care unit to examine the epidemiology of clinical sepsis. Of 113 episodes of primary bloodstream infection (BSI), 33 (29%) were microbiologically documented while 80 (71%) were cases of clinical sepsis. The overall BSI rate was 19.8 per 1,000 central line days, but fell to 5.8 per 1,000 central line days when only microbiologically confirmed cases were considered. Exposure to vascular devices was similar between patients with clinical sepsis and microbiologically confirmed BSI. The study concludes that surveillance based only on laboratory data would underestimate the true incidence of BSI.
This document analyzes surveillance data from a medical intensive care unit to examine the epidemiology of clinical sepsis. Of 113 episodes of primary bloodstream infection (BSI), 33 (29%) were microbiologically documented while 80 (71%) were cases of clinical sepsis. The overall BSI rate was 19.8 per 1,000 central line days, but fell to 5.8 per 1,000 central line days when only microbiologically confirmed cases were considered. Exposure to vascular devices was similar between patients with clinical sepsis and microbiologically confirmed BSI. The study concludes that surveillance based only on laboratory data would underestimate the true incidence of BSI.
Primary bloodstream infection (BSI) is a leading, pre-
ventable infectious complication in critically ill patients and
has a negative impact on patients outcome. Surveillance definitions for primary BSI distinguish those that are micro- biologically documented from those that are not. The latter is known as clinical sepsis, but information on its epidemi- ologic importance is limited. We analyzed prospective on- site surveillance data of nosocomial infections in a medical intensive care unit. Of the 113 episodes of primary BSI, 33 (29%) were microbiologically documented. The overall BSI infection rate was 19.8 episodes per 1,000 central-line days (confidence interval [CI] 95%, 16.1 to 23.6); the rate fell to 5.8 (CI 3.8 to 7.8) when only microbiologically docu- mented episodes were considered. Exposure to vascular devices was similar in patients with clinical sepsis and patients with microbiologically documented BSI. We con- clude that laboratory-based surveillance alone will under- estimate the incidence of primary BSI and thus jeopardize benchmarking. P rimary bloodstream infection (BSI) is a leading, infec- tious complication among critically ill patients (1). It represents about 15% of all nosocomial infections (2,3) and affects approximately 1% of all hospitalized patients (4), with an incidence rate of 5 per 1,000 central-line days (5). The impact on patient outcome is tremendous; BSI increases the mortality rate (6,7), prolongs patient stay in an intensive care unit (ICU) and in the hospital (79), and generates substantial extra costs (7,8). For these reasons, surveillance and prevention of BSI are high priorities, and several interventions have proven to be effective (1016). The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) surveillance definitions of BSI delineate two distinct enti- ties: infections that are microbiologically documented, and those that are not, called clinical sepsis (17). Although sur- veillance of the former can be laboratory based, detection of clinical sepsis requires prospective on-site surveillance. The surveillance strategy determines whether clinical sep- sis will be detected, thus affecting the overall BSI inci- dence rate. Because prospective on-site surveillance requires more resources than laboratory-based surveillance, the choice of the surveillance strategy should be based on knowledge of the importance of clinical sepsis. To our knowledge, clini- cal sepsis has never been investigated. This article describes the epidemiology of clinical sepsis in a medical ICU. Methods Setting The study took place in the 18-bed medical ICU of a large teaching hospital in Geneva, Switzerland, from October 1995 to November 1997. The unit admits 1,400 patients per year; the mean length of stay is 4 days. Surveillance and Definitions The surveillance strategy of nosocomial infection has been described previously (12). Briefly, one infection con- trol nurse visited the ICU daily (5 of 7 days), gathered information from medical and nursing records, microbio- logic and x-ray reports, and interviews with nurses and physicians in charge. All patients staying >48 hours were included and followed up for 5 days after ICU discharge (18). Nosocomial infections were defined according to CDC criteria (17), except that asymptomatic bacteriuria was not considered an infection (19). Collected variables included all nosocomial infections, demographic charac- teristics, admission and discharge diagnoses, exposure to invasive devices and antibiotics, and ICU and hospital sur- vival status. Microbiologically documented BSI required one of the following: 1) recognized pathogen in the blood and pathogen not related to an infection at another site; or 2) fever, chills, or hypotension; and any of the following: a) a common skin contaminant is isolated from at least two blood cultures drawn on separate occasions, and the organ- ism is not related to infection at another site; b) a common skin contaminant is isolated from blood culture in a patient with an intravascular device, and the physician institutes appropriate antimicrobial therapy; c) a positive antigen test RESEARCH Nosoc omi al Bl oodst r eam I nf ec t i on and Cl i ni c al Sepsi s Stphane Hugonnet,* Hugo Sax,* Philippe Eggimann,* Jean-Claude Chevrolet,* and Didier Pittet* 76 Emerging Infectious Diseases www.cdc.gov/eid Vol. 10, No. 1, January 2004 *University of Geneva Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland on blood and the organism is not related to infection at another site (17). Clinical sepsis was diagnosed when the patient had either fever, hypotension, or oliguria, and all of the follow- ing: 1) blood not cultured or no microorganism isolated; 2) no apparent infection at another site; and 3) physician institutes appropriate antimicrobial therapy for sepsis (17). The surveillance strategy, definitions, and the discharge policy did not change over the study period. Patients were discharged from the ICU, according to specific guidelines designed for this unit, and compliance with these guide- lines was checked daily by a senior staff member. An ongoing intervention aiming to reduce catheter-related infection was begun in March 1997. Reports on the inter- vention and its effect have been published previously (12). Statistical Analysis All primary BSI were considered in the first part of the analysis. Episodes of BSI that were not associated with a central line were identified. Infection rates were expressed as the total number of episodes per 1,000 ICU patient days, or the number of episodes associated with a central line per 1,000 central-line days. Their corresponding 95% confi- dence intervals (CI) were computed, according to the nor- mal approximation of the Poisson distribution. The study population was then divided into three groups to describe the epidemiology of clinical sepsis. The first group included all patients who remained free of any ICU-acquired BSI; the second group comprised all patients whose first episode was a microbiologically docu- mented BSI, and the third group included those whose first episode was clinical sepsis. Only the first episode of BSI was considered. We then performed a subgroup analysis comparing patients with and without BSI but with at least a 5-day stay in the ICU. This analysis was conducted to exclude patients who died or were discharged quickly after ICU admission to ensure that patients without BSI were sufficiently exposed to the risk of acquiring nosocomial BSI. Exposure to invasive devices was estimated by the pro- portion of patients exposed to the device and the duration of the exposure. We separately investigated peripheral, arterial, and central vascular lines. Among patients with BSI, the duration of the exposure to the vascular line was censored at onset of the first episode of BSI. Continuous variables were summarized by means or medians and compared with the Student t-test or a non- parametric test, when appropriate. Categorical variables were compared by using chi-square or the Fisher exact test. All tests were two-tailed, and p values <0.05 were considered statistically significant. All statistical analyses were conducted with Stata 7.0 (Stata Corporation, College Station, TX). Results We surveyed 1,068 patients who stayed in the ICU >48 hours, for a median length of stay of 5 days (range 2134), totaling 7,840 ICU patient days. Median age was 62.9 (range 16.292.0), and male-to-female ratio 622/446. The main admission diagnoses were infectious (38.7%), car- diovascular (24.2%), and pulmonary (17.7%) conditions. We detected 554 ICU-acquired infections, yielding an infection rate of 71 episodes per 1,000 patient-days (95% CI 64.8 to 76.5). The leading sites were the lungs (pneu- monia, 28.7%), bloodstream (20.4%), skin and soft tissue (15.3%), catheter exit site (13.5%), and urinary tract (11.2%). We detected nine episodes of secondary BSI, six secondary to a urinary tract infection, two to a lower respi- ratory tract infection, and one to a skin and soft tissue infection. Of 113 episodes of BSI, 33 (29.2%) were microbiologi- cally confirmed, and 80 (70.8%) were clinical sepsis. Four episodes (three of clinical sepsis and one of microbiologi- cally confirmed BSI) were not associated with a central line. Blood cultures were drawn in most of the clinical sep- sis episodes (66/80, 82.5%). Exposure to systemic antimi- crobial drugs before blood culture was 39.4% (13/33) among patients with microbiologically documented BSI and 77.3% (51/66) among patients with clinical sepsis (p < 0.001). Among the 20 patients with microbiologically doc- umented BSI who had not received antimicrobial drugs during the 48 hours before the blood culture, 6 were in a therapeutic window (antibiotherapy was suspended before drawing blood cultures to increase the cultures sensitivity). Among the 33 episodes of microbiologically confirmed BSI, 4 were polymicrobial. The most frequently isolated microorganisms were coagulase-negative staphylococci (n = 21). Other gram-positive cocci were Staphylococcus aureus (n = 1) and Enterococcus faecalis (n = 2). Gram- negative rods included Enterobacter aerogenes (n = 2), Serratia marcescens (n = 2), Escherichia coli (n = 1), Proteus mirabilis (n = 1), and Pseudomonas non-aerugi- nosa (n = 1). Other microorganisms found were Candida albicans (n = 1) and Propionibacterium acnes (n = 2). Table 1 displays BSI infection rates per 1,000 patient days and central-line days. The overall rate of BSI was 19.8 per 1,000 central-line days (CI 95%, 16.1 to 23.6) and markedly differed when only microbiologically document- ed BSI were considered. These 113 BSIs occurred in 91 patients; 73 patients had a single episode, 14 had two, and 4 had three episodes. The first episode was microbiologi- cally documented for 28 patients and diagnosed as clinical sepsis for 63. Selected characteristics of patients with and without BSI are displayed in Table 2. Patients without BSI tended to be older; the distribution of admission diagnosis was similar in both groups, but intoxication was more prevalent RESEARCH Emerging Infectious Diseases www.cdc.gov/eid Vol. 10, No. 1, January 2004 77 in patients without BSI, although the difference was not statistically significant. Illness appeared more severe in patients with BSI, as estimated by a higher number of dis- charge diagnoses, a longer ICU length of stay, and a high- er mortality rate. After patients who stayed <5 days were excluded, 558 patients remained in this analysis. The pic- ture remained the same. In particular, both groups were of similar age (p = 0.054); the proportion of patients admitted for intoxication was 1.9% in those without BSI and 2.3% in patients with BSI (p = 0.82). The occurrence of pneumonia, urinary tract infection, and other infections was similar in patients with microbio- logically documented BSI and clinical sepsis, but less fre- quent in patients without BSI. However, catheter exit-site infection was more frequent in patients with clinical sepsis (Figure). The results of exposure to invasive devices are shown in Table 3. Exposure to vascular lines was censored at the time of the first episode of BSI. Exposure to central lines and arterial lines was similar in patients with a microbio- logically documented episode of BSI and in those with clinical sepsis but much lower in patients without BSI. Three episodes of primary BSI occurred in patients with- out a central line in place before onset of infection. Similarly, exposure to urinary catheter and mechanical ventilation was lower in patients without BSI. After patients who stayed <5 days in the ICU were excluded, exposure to central vascular lines remained more impor- tant in patients with BSI (96.6% of exposed patients vs. 76.4%, p < 0.001), and duration of the exposure was also longer in this group (median [range], 9 days [1-39], vs. 7 days [1-117], p = 0.002). Median ICU length of stay was longer among patients with microbiologically documented BSI (15.5 days; range 467) and clinical sepsis (14.0 days; range 348) than among patients with no BSI (4 days; range 2134), (both p < 0.001). The hospital mortality rates among patients with- out BSI, with a microbiologically confirmed BSI, and with clinical sepsis were 22.7%, 32.1%, and 39.7%, respective- ly; the difference was statistically significant between the first and last group (p = 0.01). Discussion This study shows the importance of primary BSI; the bloodstream was the second most frequent infection site, representing 20% of all infections. We also found that a minority of BSI were microbiologically documented and that ignoring clinical sepsis has a large impact on the BSI infection rate. To our knowledge, this is the first report that provides a detailed epidemiologic description of clinical sepsis. Whether clinical sepsis represents a primary BSI or whether it is a systemic reaction accompanying an unrec- ognized infection at another site or a noninfectious sys- temic inflammatory response are valid concerns (1,2023). The definition is not specific because it requires, among other criteria, only one of three clinical signs (fever, hypotension, or oliguria). Also, this condition mandates antimicrobial therapy prescribed by the physician for sus- pected sepsis. Thus, we decided to use unmodified defini- tions, elaborated by CDC and widely used because they are still considered the standard operational definitions for surveillance of nosocomial infections. An epidemiologic description of patients without BSI, with microbiological- RESEARCH 78 Emerging Infectious Diseases www.cdc.gov/eid Vol. 10, No. 1, January 2004 Table 1. Primary bloodstream infection rates N Incidence rate/1,000 patient days (CI 95%) a N Incidence rate/1,000 central-line days (CI 95%) All primary bloodstream infections 113 14.4 (11.8 to 17.1) 109 19.8 (16.1 to 23.6) Microbiologically documented 33 4.2 (2.8 to 5.6) 32 5.8 (3.8 to 7.8) Clinical sepsis 80 10.2 (8.0 to 12.4) 77 14.0 (10.9 to 17.1) a CI; confidence interval. Table 2. Selected characteristics of the study population a
Characteristic Patients without BSI, n = 977 Patients with BSI, n = 91 p value Sex 0.28 Male (%) 562 (57.5) 60 (65.9) Female (%) 415 (42.5) 31 (34.1) Median age (range) 63.0 (16.292.0) 59.2 (18.786.8) 0.05 Admission diagnosis Infectious (%) 377 (38.6) 36 (39.6) 0.86 Cardiovascular (%) 241 (24.7) 17 (18.7) 0.2 Pulmonary (%) 171 (17.5) 18 (19.8) 0.59 Neurologic (%) 68 (7.0) 10 (11.0) 0.16 Intoxication (%) 50 (5.1) 2 (2.2) 0.22 Others (%) 70 (7.2) 8 (8.8) 0.57 No. of discharge diagnoses (range) 5 (130) 6 (119) <0.001 ICU length of stay (range) 4 (2134) 14 (367) <0.001 ICU mortality rate 154 (15.8) 25 (27.5) 0.004 a BSI, bloodstream infection; ICU, intensive care unit. ly documented BSI, and with clinical sepsis provides valu- able information. First, approximately 90% of primary BSIs occur in patients with intravascular devices, especial- ly central lines, and these represent the most powerful risk factors for BSI (24). In our study population, exposure to central and arterial lines was similar in both groups of patients with BSIs, but the frequency and duration of the exposure were of greater importance than they were in the group of patients without BSIs. The longer exposure to vascular devices does not reflect the impact of BSI because exposure was censored at time of BSI. Consequently, the most powerful risk factor for clinical sepsis is the same as that for microbiologically documented BSI. Second, during the same study period we implemented an intervention targeted at vascular-access care to reduce the incidence of catheter-related BSIs (12). We observed a dramatic decrease in the incidence of all catheter-related infections: catheter exit-site infection dropped from 9.2 to 3.3 episodes per 1,000 ICU-patient days (64% reduction), and microbiologically documented BSI dropped from 3.1 to 1.2 episodes per 1,000 ICU-patient-days (61% reduc- tion). Aparallel sharp decrease occurred in the rate of clin- ical sepsis, which went from 8.2 to 2.6 episodes per 1,000 ICU-patient days (68% reduction). Rates of ventilator- associated pneumonia and urinary tract infection did not change over time. These two sets of results, same exposure and same response to a prevention program, strongly sug- gest that clinical sepsis is indeed primary BSI. Blood cultures were performed in most (82.5%) cases of clinical sepsis and were negative. The absence of microorganisms can be explained in several ways. First, bacteremia is not constant, and sensitivity of the blood cul- ture increases with the number of cultures drawn and the volume of the sample (2527). Second, most of our patients (77%) with clinical sepsis were receiving broad- spectrum antimicrobial drugs for other conditions, thus decreasing the sensitivity of the test. This pattern of antimicrobial prescription is usual in critical care, as reported in large studies which showed that >60% of the patients were receiving antimicrobial drugs on the day of the study (2,28,29). In further studies to delineate the epi- demiology and pathophysiology of clinical sepsis, the sen- sitivity of blood cultures should be maximized and should include genomic approaches to identify pathogens, espe- cially if antimicrobial therapy has been initiated. The question arises regarding whether to include clini- cal sepsis in surveillance of BSI, considering the amount of work generated by on-site prospective surveillance, compared to laboratory-based surveillance. In response, the following elements should be considered. Benchmarking is increasingly performed and is part of the quality improvement process. However, the sensitivity of RESEARCH Emerging Infectious Diseases www.cdc.gov/eid Vol. 10, No. 1, January 2004 79 Figure. Frequency of nosocomial infections among patients with and without primary bloodstream infection (BSI). Columns repre- sent the proportion of patients with each type of infection. Brackets indicate a significant (p < 0.05) difference between groups. Table 3. Exposure to invasive devices among patients with and without primary bloodstream infection No BSI, n = 977 Microbiologically confirmed BSI, n = 28 Clinical sepsis, n = 63 Peripheral catheter Exposed patients (%) 858 (87.8) 24 (85.7) 58 (92.1) Catheter-days [days, median (range)] 3 (1-30) 4 (1-10) b 5.5 (1-20) c
Central line Exposed patients (%) 627 (64.2) d 27 (96.4) 61 (96.8) Catheter-days [days, median (range)] 4 (1-117) d 8 (2-39) 8 (1-33) Arterial line Exposed patients (%) 791 (81.0) d 28 (100) 62 (98.4) Catheter-days [days, median (range)] 3 (1-47) d 7 (2-23) 8 (121) Mechanical ventilation Exposed patients (%) 380 (38.9) d 19 (67.9) 53 (84.1) e
MV-days [days, median (range)] 3 (1123) d 12 (261) 11 (135) Urinary catheter Exposed patients (%) 665 (68.1) d 27 (96.4) 58 (92.1) Catheter-days [days, median (range)] 3 (177) d 12 (163) 14 (145) a BSI, bloodstream infection; MV, mechanical ventilation. b p = 0.059 when compared to no BSI. c p < 0.001 when compared to no BSI, and p = 0.053 when compared to microbiologically confirmed BSI. d p < 0.005 when compared to microbiologically confirmed BSI and clinical sepsis. e p = 0.097 when compared to microbiologically confirmed BSI. the surveillance method to detect clinical sepsis will great- ly impact the infection rate and make benchmarking diffi- cult. Our overall BSI rate was high (19.8 episodes per 1,000 central-line days), well above that reported by the National Nosocomial Infection Surveillance (NNIS) sys- tem (3,5,30). This difference is due to the proportion of clinical sepsis, 80% in our study and 8% in NNIS (3). When microbiologically documented BSI alone is consid- ered, our BSI rate is comparable to that reported in the lit- erature, including the rate reported by NNIS hospitals (5,14,16,31). Surveillance estimates the incidence of a dis- ease. Underdetection of clinical sepsis will grossly under- estimate its incidence, and data generated by the system will be misinterpreted, affecting the allocation of resources. Finally, demonstrating the effectiveness of a prevention program that aims to reduce BSI will require a much greater sample size than if cases of clinical sepsis were considered in the surveillance system. Conversely, the cost-effectiveness of prevention programs will be underestimated if only microbiologically documented BSI is considered. This study has some limitations. Whether our results can be extrapolated to other ICUs needs to be tested. Indeed, the surveillance criteria for clinical sepsis might be sensitive to local case management policies, for instance, regarding antimicrobial drug prescription. In addition, the situation in surgical ICUs might be quite different, as sys- temic inflammatory reactions after surgery that mimic clinical sepsis are frequent (22,23). Neither can we rule out some degree of misclassification of clinical sepsis that is actually catheter infection. This possibility is suggested by the fact that catheter exit-site infections were more preva- lent in the group of patients with clinical sepsis than in the group of patients with microbiologically documented BSI. This misclassification would be very important if we were investigating the impact of clinical sepsis. However, this is not relevant in terms of surveillance and infection control and prevention because both clinical sepsis and catheter infection have the same risk factors, are sensitive to the same prevention strategies, and are equal markers of poor quality of care. In conclusion, clinical sepsis is an epidemiologically important syndrome. We believe that surveillance strate- gies that can detect this syndrome should be favored because prevention, benchmarking, program evaluation, and ultimately, quality of patient care depend on the accu- racy of surveillance data. Acknowledgments We are indebted to the members of the Infection Control Program and to Nadia Colaizzi, in particular, for data manage- ment. We also thank Rosemary Sudan for editorial assistance. This study was partially funded by a research grant provid- ed by the Department of Internal Medicine, University of Geneva Hospitals Comit directeur des Laboratoires de Recherche clin- ique et Groupe de Recherche en Analyse des Systmes de Sant du Dpartement de Mdecine Interne, and a research grant by the Swiss National Science Foundation (grant number 32- 68164.02). Dr. Hugonnet is a research associate in the Infection Control Program of the University of Geneva Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland. His main research interests are nosocomial infec- tions among critically ill patients and surveillance strategies. References 1. Martin GS, Mannino DM, Eaton S, Moss M. The epidemiology of sepsis in the United States from 1979 through 2000. N Engl J Med 2003;348:154654. 2. Vincent JL, Bihari DJ, Suter PM, Bruining HA, White J, Nicolas- Chanoin MH, et al. The prevalence of nosocomial infection in inten- sive care units in Europe. 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Address for correspondence: Didier Pittet, Infection Control Program, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Geneva Hospitals, 1211 Geneva 14, Switzerland; fax: +41-22/372 39 87; email: didier.pittet@ hcuge.ch RESEARCH Emerging Infectious Diseases www.cdc.gov/eid Vol. 10, No. 1, January 2004 81 The opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or the institutions with which the authors are affiliated.
Current Trends in The Epidemiologyof Nosocomial Bloodstream Infectionsin Patients With Hematological Malignanciesand Solid Neoplasms in Hospitalsin The United States
Current Trends in The Epidemiologyof Nosocomial Bloodstream Infectionsin Patients With Hematological Malignanciesand Solid Neoplasms in Hospitalsin The United States