Bacteremic nosocomial pneumonia. A 7-year experience in one institution

To describe the epidemiology, microbiology, and outcome of nosocomial pneumonia with secondary bloodstream infection. Prospective cohort study. Tertiary care Canadian teaching hospital. Inpatients. All inpatient blood cultures were concurrently monitored over an 89 month period. Following chart revi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inChest Vol. 108; no. 3; p. 786
Main Authors Taylor, G D, Buchanan-Chell, M, Kirkland, T, McKenzie, M, Wiens, R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.09.1995
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Summary:To describe the epidemiology, microbiology, and outcome of nosocomial pneumonia with secondary bloodstream infection. Prospective cohort study. Tertiary care Canadian teaching hospital. Inpatients. All inpatient blood cultures were concurrently monitored over an 89 month period. Following chart review, patients experiencing nosocomial bloodstream infection due to pneumonia were identified. A standardized definition of pneumonia was used. One hundred forty-nine episodes occurred in 145 patients, 0.66/1,000 hospital admissions, 8.4% of all nosocomial bloodstream infections. No change in rate occurred in the study period. Fifty-four percent of episodes developed in one of seven ICUs. Staphylococcus aureus was the most frequently identified etiologic organism (27%). The ICU and non-ICU cases did not differ in etiology. No organism became more prevalent during the study period. Twenty percent of patients died within 1 week of first positive culture; episodes associated with Pseudomonas species had a much higher mortality rate (45%) than other infections (14%) (p = 0.002). The ICU and non-ICU infections had a similar mortality rate. Pneumonia is an important cause of nosocomial bloodstream infection, but it is not increasing in frequency or changing in etiology in our institution. The ICUs are a major contributor to this problem but have the same case short-term mortality rate and microbial etiology as non-ICU cases. Cases associated with Pseudomonas have a much higher mortality rate.
ISSN:0012-3692
DOI:10.1378/chest.108.3.786