Roberts Rebecca R, Hota Bala, Ahmad Ibrar, Scott R Douglas, Foster Susan D, Abbasi Fauzia, Schabowski Shari, Kampe Linda M, Ciavarella Ginevra G, Supino Mark, Naples Jeremy, Cordell Ralph, Levy Stuart B, Weinstein Robert A
Department of Emergency Medicin, John H Stroger Jr Hospital of Cook County, Chicago, Illinois 60612, USA.
Clin Infect Dis. 2009 Oct 15;49(8):1175-84. doi: 10.1086/605630.
Organisms resistant to antimicrobials continue to emerge and spread. This study was performed to measure the medical and societal cost attributable to antimicrobial-resistant infection (ARI).
A sample of high-risk hospitalized adult patients was selected. Measurements included ARI, total cost, duration of stay, comorbidities, acute pathophysiology, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation III score, intensive care unit stay, surgery, health care-acquired infection, and mortality. Hospital services used and outcomes were abstracted from electronic and written medical records. Medical costs were measured from the hospital perspective. A sensitivity analysis including 3 study designs was conducted. Regression was used to adjust for potential confounding in the random sample and in the sample expanded with additional patients with ARI. Propensity scores were used to select matched control subjects for each patient with ARI for a comparison of mean cost for patients with and without ARI.
In a sample of 1391 patients, 188 (13.5%) had ARI. The medical costs attributable to ARI ranged from $18,588 to $29,069 per patient in the sensitivity analysis. Excess duration of hospital stay was 6.4-12.7 days, and attributable mortality was 6.5%. The societal costs were $10.7-$15.0 million. Using the lowest estimates from the sensitivity analysis resulted in a total cost of $13.35 million in 2008 dollars in this patient cohort.
The attributable medical and societal costs of ARI are considerable. Data from this analysis could form the basis for a more comprehensive evaluation of the cost of resistance and the potential economic benefits of prevention programs.
对抗菌药物耐药的微生物不断出现并传播。本研究旨在衡量抗菌药物耐药感染(ARI)所致的医疗和社会成本。
选取高危住院成年患者样本。测量指标包括ARI、总成本、住院时间、合并症、急性病理生理学、急性生理学与慢性健康状况评估III评分、重症监护病房住院时间、手术、医疗保健相关感染和死亡率。从电子和书面病历中提取所使用的医院服务和结果。从医院角度衡量医疗成本。进行了包括3种研究设计的敏感性分析。采用回归分析对随机样本以及纳入更多ARI患者的扩大样本中的潜在混杂因素进行调整。使用倾向得分法为每位ARI患者选择匹配的对照对象,以比较有无ARI患者的平均成本。
在1391例患者样本中,188例(13.5%)发生ARI。在敏感性分析中,ARI所致的医疗成本为每位患者18,588美元至29,069美元。住院时间延长6.4 - 12.7天,归因死亡率为6.5%。社会成本为1070万至1500万美元。采用敏感性分析中的最低估计值,该患者队列以2008年美元计算的总成本为1335万美元。
ARI所致的医疗和社会成本相当可观。该分析数据可为更全面评估耐药成本及预防项目的潜在经济效益奠定基础。