Horan T C, Culver D H, Gaynes R P, Jarvis W R, Edwards J R, Reid C R
Hospital Infections Program, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 1993 Feb;14(2):73-80. doi: 10.1086/646686.
To describe the distribution of nosocomial infections among surgical patients by site of infection for different types of operations, and to show how the risk of certain adverse outcomes associated with nosocomial infection varied by site, type of operation, and exposure to specific medical devices.
Surveillance of surgical patients during January 1986-June 1992 using standard definitions and protocols for both comprehensive (all sites, all operations) and targeted (all sites, selected operations) infection detection.
Acute care US hospitals participating in the National Nosocomial Infection Surveillance (NNIS) System: 42,509 patients with 52,388 infections from 95 hospitals using comprehensive surveillance protocols and an additional 5,659 patients with 6,963 infections from 11 more hospitals using a targeted protocol.
Surgical site infection was the most common nosocomial infection site (37%) when data were reported by hospitals using the comprehensive protocols. When infections reported from both types of protocols were stratified by type of operation, other sites were most frequent following certain operations (e.g., urinary tract infection after joint prosthesis surgery [52%]). Among the infected surgical patients who died, the probability that an infection was related to the patient's death varied significantly with the site of infection, from 22% for urinary tract infection to 89% for organ/space surgical site infection, but was independent of the type of operation performed. The probability of developing a secondary bloodstream infection also varied significantly with the primary site of infection, from 3.1% for incisional surgical site infection to 9.5% for organ/space surgical site infection (p < .001). For all infections except pneumonia, the risk of developing a secondary bloodstream infection also varied significantly with the type of operation performed (p < .001) and was generally highest for cardiac surgery and lowest for abdominal hysterectomy. Surgical patients who developed ventilator-associated pneumonia were more than twice as likely to develop a secondary bloodstream infection as nonventilated pneumonia patients (8.1% versus 3.3%, p < .001).
For surgical patients with nosocomial infection, the distribution of nosocomial infections by site varies by type of operation, the frequency with which nosocomial infections contribute to patient mortality varies by site of infection but not by type of operation, and the risk of developing a secondary bloodstream infection varies by type of primary infection and, except for pneumonia, by type of operation.
按感染部位描述不同类型手术患者医院感染的分布情况,并展示与医院感染相关的某些不良结局的风险如何因感染部位、手术类型以及接触特定医疗设备而有所不同。
1986年1月至1992年6月期间,采用标准定义和方案对手术患者进行监测,包括全面(所有部位、所有手术)和针对性(所有部位、选定手术)感染检测。
参与国家医院感染监测(NNIS)系统的美国急症护理医院:95家医院的42509例患者发生52388例感染,采用全面监测方案;另有11家医院的5659例患者发生6963例感染,采用针对性方案。
采用全面方案的医院报告数据时,手术部位感染是最常见的医院感染部位(37%)。当按手术类型对两种方案报告的感染进行分层时,某些手术后其他部位感染最为常见(例如,关节置换手术后尿路感染[52%])。在因医院感染死亡的手术患者中,感染与患者死亡相关的概率因感染部位而异,从尿路感染的22%到器官/腔隙手术部位感染的89%,但与所进行的手术类型无关。发生继发性血流感染的概率也因原发性感染部位而异,从切口手术部位感染的3.1%到器官/腔隙手术部位感染的9.5%(p<0.001)。除肺炎外,所有感染发生继发性血流感染的风险也因所进行的手术类型而异(p<0.001),通常心脏手术最高,腹部子宫切除术最低。发生呼吸机相关性肺炎的手术患者发生继发性血流感染的可能性是非呼吸机相关性肺炎患者的两倍多(8.1%对3.3%,p<0.001)。
对于发生医院感染的手术患者来说,医院感染的部位分布因手术类型而异,医院感染导致患者死亡的频率因感染部位而异,而非因手术类型而异,发生继发性血流感染的风险因原发性感染类型而异,除肺炎外,还因手术类型而异。