Détail du document
Identifiant

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:1006...

Sujet
Research
Auteur
Yi, Guangzhao de Kraker, Marlieke E. A. Buetti, Niccolò Zhong, Xiaoni Li, Jinyan Yuan, Zhe Zhu, Weimin Zhou, Jia Zhou, Hongyu
Langue
en
Editeur

BioMed Central

Catégorie

Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control

Année

2023

Date de référencement

21/10/2023

Mots clés
cohort alive influenza 95% study adult ci community-acquired cshr hospitalized mortality factors patients
Métrique

Résumé

BACKGROUND: Secondary bacterial pneumonia is an important complication of seasonal influenza, but little data is available about impact on death and risk factors.

This study identified risk factors for all-cause in-hospital mortality and secondary bacterial pneumonia among hospitalized adult patients with community-acquired influenza.

METHODS: A retrospective cohort study was performed at a tertiary teaching hospital in southwest China.

The study cohort included all adult hospitalized patients with a laboratory-confirmed, community-acquired influenza virus infection during three consecutive influenza seasons from 2017 to 2020.

Cause-specific Cox regression was used to analyze risk factors for mortality and secondary bacterial pneumonia, respectively, accounting for competing events (discharge alive and discharge alive or death without secondary bacterial pneumonia, respectively).

RESULTS: Among 174 patients enrolled in this study, 14.4% developed secondary bacterial pneumonia and 11.5% died during hospitalization.

For all-cause in-hospital mortality, time-varying secondary bacterial pneumonia was a direct risk factor of death (cause-specific hazard ratio [csHR] 3.38, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.25–9.17); underlying disease indirectly increased death risk through decreasing the hazard of being discharged alive (csHR 0.55, 95% CI 0.39–0.77).

For secondary bacterial pneumonia, the final model only confirmed direct risk factors: age ≥ 65 years (csHR 2.90, 95% CI 1.27–6.62), male gender (csHR 3.78, 95% CI 1.12–12.84) and mechanical ventilation on admission (csHR 2.96, 95% CI 1.32–6.64).

CONCLUSIONS: Secondary bacterial pneumonia was a major risk factor for in-hospital mortality among adult hospitalized patients with community-acquired influenza.

Prevention strategies for secondary bacterial pneumonia should target elderly male patients and critically ill patients under mechanical ventilation.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13756-023-01234-y.

Yi, Guangzhao,de Kraker, Marlieke E. A.,Buetti, Niccolò,Zhong, Xiaoni,Li, Jinyan,Yuan, Zhe,Zhu, Weimin,Zhou, Jia,Zhou, Hongyu, 2023, Risk factors for in-hospital mortality and secondary bacterial pneumonia among hospitalized adult patients with community-acquired influenza: a large retrospective cohort study, BioMed Central

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