Santos Claudia Villatoro, Fukushima Elisa Akagi, Zhao Wei, Sharma Mamta, Youssef Dima, Spzunar Susan, Levine Miriam, Saravolatz Louis, Bhargava Ashish
MD, PhD, Internal Medicine Department. Ascension St John Hospital, Detroit, MI. 48236, USA.
MD, Infectious Disease Department. Ascension St John Hospital, Detroit, MI. 48236, USA.
Germs. 2022 Jun 30;12(2):253-261. doi: 10.18683/germs.2022.1327. eCollection 2022 Jun.
Prior evidence found that bloodstream infections (BSIs) are common in viral respiratory infections and can lead to heightened morbidity and mortality. We described the incidence, risk factors, and outcomes of BSIs in patients with COVID-19.
This was a single-center retrospective cohort study of adults consecutively admitted from March to June 2020 for COVID-19 with BSIs. Data were collected by electronic medical record review. BSIs were defined as positive blood cultures (BCs) with a known pathogen in one or more BCs or the same commensal organism in two or more BCs.
We evaluated 290 patients with BCs done; 39 (13.4%) had a positive result. In univariable analysis, male sex, black/African American race, admission from a facility, hemiplegia, altered mental status, and a higher Charlson Comorbidity Index were positively associated with positive BCs, whereas obesity and systolic blood pressure (SBP) were negatively associated. Patients with positive BCs were more likely to have severe COVID-19, be admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU), require mechanical ventilation, have septic shock, and higher mortality. In multivariable logistic regression, factors that were independent predictors of positive BCs were male sex (OR=2.8, p=0.030), hypoalbuminemia (OR=3.3, p=0.013), ICU admission (OR=5.3, p<0.001), SBP<100 mmHg (OR=3.7, p=0.021) and having a procedure (OR=10.5, p=0.019). Patients with an abnormal chest X-ray on admission were less likely to have positive BCs (OR=0.3, p=0.007).
We found that male sex, abnormal chest X-ray, low SBP, and hypoalbuminemia upon hospital admission, admission to ICU, and having a procedure during hospitalization were independent predictors of BSIs in patients with COVID-19.
先前的证据表明,血流感染(BSIs)在病毒性呼吸道感染中很常见,可导致发病率和死亡率升高。我们描述了新型冠状病毒肺炎(COVID-19)患者血流感染的发生率、危险因素和结局。
这是一项单中心回顾性队列研究,研究对象为2020年3月至6月因COVID-19合并血流感染而连续入院的成年人。通过电子病历回顾收集数据。血流感染定义为一份或多份血培养(BCs)中有已知病原体的血培养阳性,或两份或更多份血培养中有相同的共生菌。
我们评估了290例进行血培养的患者;39例(13.4%)结果呈阳性。在单变量分析中,男性、黑人/非裔美国人种族、从医疗机构入院、偏瘫、精神状态改变和较高的查尔森合并症指数与血培养阳性呈正相关,而肥胖和收缩压(SBP)与血培养阳性呈负相关。血培养阳性的患者更有可能患有重症COVID-19,入住重症监护病房(ICU),需要机械通气,发生感染性休克,且死亡率更高。在多变量逻辑回归中,血培养阳性的独立预测因素为男性(OR=2.8,p=0.030)、低白蛋白血症(OR=3.3,p=0.013)、入住ICU(OR=5.3,p<0.001)、SBP<100 mmHg(OR=3.7,p=0.)和接受过手术(OR=10.5,p=0.019)。入院时胸部X线异常的患者血培养阳性的可能性较小(OR=0.3,p=0.00)。
我们发现,男性、入院时胸部X线异常、SBP低、低白蛋白血症、入住ICU以及住院期间接受手术是COVID-19患者血流感染的独立预测因素。