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患者在学术性卒中中心住院期间发生的医院获得性有症状尿路感染会影响出院去向。

Hospital-acquired symptomatic urinary tract infection in patients admitted to an academic stroke center affects discharge disposition.

机构信息

Department of Neurology, University of Texas at Houston Medical School, Houston, TX 77030, USA.

出版信息

PM R. 2013 Jan;5(1):9-15. doi: 10.1016/j.pmrj.2012.08.002. Epub 2012 Oct 25.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To test the role of hospital-acquired symptomatic urinary tract infection (SUTI) as an independent predictor of discharge disposition in the acute stroke patient.

STUDY DESIGN

A retrospective study of data collected from a stroke registry service. The registry is maintained by the Specialized Programs of Translational Research in Acute Stroke Data Core. The Specialized Programs of Translational Research in Acute Stroke is a national network of 8 centers that perform early phase clinical projects, share data, and promote new approaches to therapy for acute stroke.

SETTING

A single university-based hospital.

PARTICIPANTS

We performed a data query of the fields of interest from our university-based stroke registry, a collection of 200 variables collected prospectively for each patient admitted to the stroke service between July 2004 and October 2009, with discharge disposition of home, inpatient rehabilitation, skilled nursing facility, or long-term acute care.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES

Baseline demographics, including age, gender, ethnicity, and National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score, were collected. Cerebrovascular disease risk factors were used for independent risk assessment. Interaction terms were created between SUTI and known covariates, such as age, NIHSS, serum creatinine level, history of stroke, and urinary incontinence. Because patients who share discharge disposition tend to have similar length of hospitalization, we analyzed the effect of SUTI on the median length of stay for a correlation. Days in the intensive care unit and death were used to evaluate morbidity and mortality. By using multivariate logistic regression, the data were analyzed for differences in poststroke disposition among patients with SUTI.

RESULTS

Of 4971 patients admitted to the University of Texas at Houston Stroke Service, 2089 were discharged to home, 1029 to inpatient rehabilitation, 659 to a skilled nursing facility, and 226 to a long-term acute care facility. Patients with an SUTI were 57% less likely to be discharged home compared with the other levels of care (P < .0001; odds ratio 0.430 [95% confidence interval 0.303-0.609]). When considering inpatient rehabilitation versus skilled nursing facility, patients with SUTI were 38% less likely to be discharged to inpatient rehabilitation (P < .0058; odds ratio 0.626 [95% confidence interval, 0.449-0.873]). We performed interaction analyses for SUTI and age, NIHSS, urinary incontinence, serum creatinine level, and history of stroke. We noted an interaction between SUTI and NIHSS for discharge disposition to a skilled nursing facility versus a long-term acute care facility. For patients with SUTI, a 1-unit increase in NIHSS results in a 10.6% increase in the likelihood of stroke rehabilitation in a long-term acute care facility compared with 5.6% increased likelihood for patients without SUTI (P = .0370).

CONCLUSIONS

Acute stroke patients with hospital-acquired SUTI are less likely to be discharged home. In our analysis, if poststroke care is necessary, then patients with SUTI are more likely to receive inpatient stroke rehabilitation at the level of care suggestive of lower functional status. For every point increase in NIHSS, stroke patients with SUTI are 10.6% more likely to require continued rehabilitation care in a long-term acute care facility versus a skilled nursing facility compared with 5.6% for patients without SUTI. The combination of premorbid urinary incontinence and urinary tract infection has no additional impact on discharge disposition. This study is limited by its retrospective nature and the undetermined role of psychosocial factors related to discharge. Prospective studies are warranted on the efficacy of early catheter discontinuation, identification of new-onset urinary incontinence, use of genitourinary barriers, and catheter care every shift as variables that can decrease the risk of infection. The information obtained from prospective studies will have an impact on resource use that is of prime importance in the current health care climate.

摘要

目的

检验医院获得性有症状尿路感染(SUTI)作为急性脑卒中患者出院去向的独立预测因子的作用。

研究设计

对来自卒中登记服务的数据进行回顾性研究。该登记由急性卒中数据核心的专门转化研究计划维护。专门的转化研究计划是一个由 8 个中心组成的国家网络,这些中心进行早期临床项目、共享数据,并为急性卒中的治疗提供新方法。

地点

一所大学附属医院。

参与者

我们对我们大学附属医院的卒中登记处进行了数据查询,该登记处收集了 200 个变量,每个患者在 2004 年 7 月至 2009 年 10 月期间入住卒中服务时前瞻性收集,出院去向为家庭、住院康复、熟练护理设施或长期急性护理。

主要观察指标

收集基线人口统计学资料,包括年龄、性别、种族和 NIHSS 评分。脑血管病危险因素用于独立风险评估。创建了 SUTI 与已知协变量(如年龄、NIHSS、血清肌酐水平、卒中史和尿失禁)之间的交互项。由于具有相似出院去向的患者往往具有相似的住院时间,因此我们分析了 SUTI 对相关中位住院时间的影响。使用 ICU 天数和死亡来评估发病率和死亡率。通过使用多变量逻辑回归,对 SUTI 患者卒中后处置差异的数据进行分析。

结果

在休斯顿德克萨斯大学卒中服务中心收治的 4971 名患者中,2089 名出院回家,1029 名入住住院康复,659 名入住熟练护理设施,226 名入住长期急性护理设施。与其他护理水平相比,患有 SUTI 的患者出院回家的可能性低 57%(P<0.0001;优势比 0.430 [95%置信区间 0.303-0.609])。当考虑住院康复与熟练护理设施时,患有 SUTI 的患者出院到住院康复的可能性低 38%(P<0.0058;优势比 0.626 [95%置信区间,0.449-0.873])。我们对 SUTI 与年龄、NIHSS、尿失禁、血清肌酐水平和卒中史进行了交互分析。我们注意到 SUTI 与 NIHSS 之间存在交互作用,影响到熟练护理设施与长期急性护理设施之间的出院去向。对于患有 SUTI 的患者,NIHSS 增加 1 个单位,导致在长期急性护理设施中接受卒中康复治疗的可能性增加 10.6%,而对于没有 SUTI 的患者,这种可能性增加 5.6%(P=0.0370)。

结论

患有急性卒中且发生医院获得性 SUTI 的患者出院回家的可能性较低。在我们的分析中,如果需要卒中后护理,那么患有 SUTI 的患者更有可能在护理水平较低的情况下接受住院卒中康复治疗。与没有 SUTI 的患者相比,每增加 1 个 NIHSS 点,患有 SUTI 的卒中患者更有可能在长期急性护理设施而不是熟练护理设施中需要持续康复治疗,比例为 10.6%(与 5.6%)。在确定出院去向方面,尿失禁和尿路感染的合并发生并没有增加额外的影响。本研究的局限性在于其回顾性性质和与出院相关的未确定的社会心理因素的作用。有必要进行前瞻性研究,以评估早期导管拔除、新发尿失禁的识别、使用泌尿生殖系统屏障以及每班次更换导管护理等变量对降低感染风险的作用。前瞻性研究获得的信息将对资源利用产生影响,这在当前的医疗保健环境中至关重要。

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