National Institute for Health Research Health Protection Research Unit in Healthcare Associated Infection and Antimicrobial Resistance at Imperial College London, London, England.
Modelling and Economics Unit, National Infection Service, Public Health England, London, England.
PLoS One. 2019 Sep 10;14(9):e0221944. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0221944. eCollection 2019.
Antibiotic resistance poses a threat to public health and healthcare systems. Escherichia coli causes more bacteraemia episodes in England than any other bacterial species. This study aimed to estimate the burden of E. coli bacteraemia and associated antibiotic resistance in the secondary care setting.
This was a retrospective cohort study, with E. coli bacteraemia as the main exposure of interest. Adult hospital in-patients, admitted to acute NHS hospitals between July 2011 and June 2012 were included. English national surveillance and administrative datasets were utilised. Cox proportional hazard, subdistribution hazard and multistate models were constructed to estimate rate of discharge, rate of in-hospital death and excess length of stay, with a unit bed day cost applied to the latter to estimate cost burden from the healthcare system perspective.
14,042 E. coli bacteraemia and 8,919,284 non-infected inpatient observations were included. E. coli bacteraemia was associated with an increased rate of in-hospital death across all models, with an adjusted subdistribution hazard ratio of 5.88 (95% CI: 5.62-6.15). Resistance was not found to be associated with in-hospital mortality once adjusting for patient and hospital covariates. However, resistance was found to be associated with an increased excess length of stay. This was especially true for third generation cephalosporin (1.58 days excess length of stay, 95% CI: 0.84-2.31) and piperacillin/tazobactam resistance (1.23 days (95% CI: 0.50-1.95)). The annual cost of E. coli bacteraemia was estimated to be £14,346,400 (2012 £), with third-generation cephalosporin resistance associated with excess costs per infection of £420 (95% CI: 220-630).
E. coli bacteraemia places a statistically significant burden on patient health and the hospital sector in England. Resistance to front-line antibiotics increases length of stay; increasing the cost burden of such infections in the secondary care setting.
抗生素耐药性对公共卫生和医疗保健系统构成威胁。大肠杆菌引起的英格兰菌血症比任何其他细菌引起的菌血症都多。本研究旨在评估二级保健环境中大肠杆菌菌血症的负担和相关抗生素耐药性。
这是一项回顾性队列研究,主要暴露因素为大肠杆菌菌血症。纳入 2011 年 7 月至 2012 年 6 月期间在急性国民保健服务(NHS)医院住院的成年住院患者。利用英国国家监测和行政数据集。构建 Cox 比例风险、亚分布风险和多状态模型,以估计出院率、院内死亡率和住院时间延长率,并对后者应用单位床位日成本,以从医疗保健系统角度估计成本负担。
纳入 14042 例大肠杆菌菌血症和 8919284 例非感染住院观察。在所有模型中,大肠杆菌菌血症与住院死亡率增加相关,校正后的亚分布风险比为 5.88(95%CI:5.62-6.15)。一旦调整患者和医院协变量,耐药性与院内死亡率无关。然而,耐药性与住院时间延长有关。第三代头孢菌素(1.58 天的住院时间延长,95%CI:0.84-2.31)和哌拉西林/他唑巴坦耐药性(1.23 天(95%CI:0.50-1.95))尤其如此。大肠杆菌菌血症的年费用估计为 1434.64 万英镑(2012 年),第三代头孢菌素耐药性使每例感染的额外费用增加 420 英镑(95%CI:220-630 英镑)。
大肠杆菌菌血症对英格兰患者健康和医院部门造成了统计学上显著的负担。一线抗生素耐药性增加了住院时间,增加了二级保健环境中此类感染的成本负担。