Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition, Virginia Commonwealth University and McGuire VA Medical Center, Richmond, VA 23249, USA.
Hepatology. 2012 Dec;56(6):2328-35. doi: 10.1002/hep.25947.
Bacterial infections are an important cause of mortality in cirrhosis, but there is a paucity of multicenter studies. The aim was to define factors predisposing to infection-related mortality in hospitalized patients with cirrhosis. A prospective, cohort study of patients with cirrhosis with infections was performed at eight North American tertiary-care hepatology centers. Data were collected on admission vitals, disease severity (model for endstage liver disease [MELD] and sequential organ failure [SOFA] scores), first infection site, type (community-acquired, healthcare-associated [HCA] or nosocomial), and second infection occurrence during hospitalization. The outcome was mortality within 30 days. A multivariate logistic regression model predicting mortality was created. 207 patients (55 years, 60% men, MELD 20) were included. Most first infections were HCA (71%), then nosocomial (15%) and community-acquired (14%). Urinary tract infections (52%), spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP, 23%) and spontaneous bacteremia (21%) formed the majority of the first infections. Second infections were seen in 50 (24%) patients and were largely preventable: respiratory, including aspiration (28%), urinary, including catheter-related (26%), fungal (14%), and Clostridium difficile (12%) infections. Forty-nine patients (23.6%) who died within 30 days had higher admission MELD (25 versus 18, P < 0.0001), lower serum albumin (2.4 g/dL versus 2.8 g/dL, P = 0.002), and second infections (49% versus 16%, P < 0.0001) but equivalent SOFA scores (9.2 versus 9.9, P = 0.86). The case fatality rate was highest for C. difficile (40%), respiratory (37.5%), and spontaneous bacteremia (37%), and lowest for SBP (17%) and urinary infections (15%). The model for mortality included admission MELD (odds ratio [OR]: 1.12), heart rate (OR: 1.03) albumin (OR: 0.5), and second infection (OR: 4.42) as significant variables.
Potentially preventable second infections are predictors of mortality independent of liver disease severity in this multicenter cirrhosis cohort.
定义导致住院肝硬化患者感染相关死亡率的相关因素。
在北美 8 个三级保健肝病中心进行了一项前瞻性肝硬化伴感染患者队列研究。收集入院生命体征、疾病严重程度(终末期肝病模型[MELD]和序贯器官衰竭评分[SOFA])、首次感染部位、类型(社区获得性、医疗保健相关性[HCA]或医院获得性)以及住院期间第二次感染的发生情况。结局是 30 天内死亡。建立预测死亡率的多变量逻辑回归模型。
共纳入 207 例患者(55 岁,60%为男性,MELD 20)。大多数首次感染为 HCA(71%),其次为医院获得性(15%)和社区获得性(14%)。尿路感染(52%)、自发性细菌性腹膜炎(SBP,23%)和自发性菌血症(21%)构成了大多数首次感染。50 例(24%)患者发生二次感染,大部分可预防:包括吸入性(28%)、尿路感染(包括导管相关性[26%])、真菌(14%)和艰难梭菌(12%)感染。30 天内死亡的 49 例患者入院时 MELD 更高(25 与 18,P < 0.0001),血清白蛋白更低(2.4 g/dL 与 2.8 g/dL,P = 0.002),且发生二次感染(49%与 16%,P < 0.0001),但 SOFA 评分相同(9.2 与 9.9,P = 0.86)。艰难梭菌(40%)、呼吸(37.5%)和自发性菌血症(37%)的病死率最高,SBP(17%)和尿路感染(15%)最低。死亡率模型包括入院 MELD(比值比[OR]:1.12)、心率(OR:1.03)、白蛋白(OR:0.5)和二次感染(OR:4.42)作为显著变量。
在这项多中心肝硬化队列研究中,可预防的二次感染是独立于肝脏疾病严重程度的死亡预测因素。