Surveillance, control and management of infections in intensive care units in Southern Europe, Turkey and Iran - A prospective multicenter point prevalence study

Date
2014Author
Erdem, HakanInan, Asuman
Altindis, Selma
Carevic, Biljana
Askarian, Mehrdad
Cottle, Lucy
Beovic, Bojana
Csomos, Akos
Metodiev, Krassimir
Ahmetagic, Sead
Harxhi, Arjan
Raka, Lul
Grozdanovski, Krsto
Nechifor, Mihai
Alp, Emine
Bozkurt, Fatma
Hosoglu, Salih
Balik, Ismail
Yilmaz, Gulden
Jereb, Matjaz
Moradi, Fatemeh
Petrov, Nikolay
Kaya, Selcuk
Koksal, Iftihar
Aslan, Turan
Elaldi, Nazif
Akkoyunlu, Yasemin
Moravveji, Seyyed Alireza
Csato, Gabor
Szedlak, Balazs
Akata, Filiz
Oncu, Serkan
Grgic, Svjetlana
Cosic, Gorana
Stefanov, Chavdar
Farrokhnia, Mehrdad
Mueller, Maria
Luca, Catalina
Koluder, Nada
Korten, Volkan
Platikanov, Viliyan
Ivanova, Petja
Soltanipour, Soheil
Vakili, Mahmood
Farahangiz, Saman
Afkhamzadeh, Abdorrahim
Beeching, Nicholas
Ahmed, Salman Shaheer
Cami, Alma
Shiraly, Ramin
Jazbec, Anja
Mirkovic, Tomislav
Leblebicioglu, Hakan
Naber, Kurt
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Show full item recordAbstract
Objective: We aimed to compare the features of intensive care units (ICUs), their antimicrobial resistance patterns, infection control policies, and distribution of infectious diseases from central Europe to Mid-West Asia. Methods: A cross-sectional point prevalence study was performed in 88 ICUs from 12 countries. Characteristics of ICUs, patient and antibiotic therapy data were collected with a standard form by infectious diseases specialists. Results: Out of 749, 305 patients at least with one infectious disease were assessed and 254 patients were reported to have coexistent medical problems. When primary infectious diseases diagnoses of the patients were evaluated, 69 had community-acquired, 61 had healthcare-associated, and 176 had hospital-acquired infections. Pneumonia was the most frequent ICU infection seen in half of the patients. Distribution of frequent pathogens was as follows: Enteric Gram-negatives (n = 62, 28.8%), Acinetobacter spp. (n = 47, 21.9%), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (n = 29, 13.5%). Multidrug resistance profiles of the infecting microorganisms seem to have a uniform pattern throughout Southern Europe and Turkey. On the other hand, active and device-associated infection surveillance was performed in Turkey more than Iran and Southeastern Europe (p < 0.05). However, designing antibiotic treatment according to culture results was highest in Southeastern Europe (p < 0.05). The most frequently used antibiotics were carbapenems (n = 92, 30.2%), followed by anti-gram positive agents (vancomycin, teicoplanin, linezolid, daptomycin, and tigecycline; n = 79, 25.9%), beta-lactam/beta lactamase inhibitors (n = 78, 25.6%), and extended-spectrum cephalosporins (n = 73, 23.9%). Conclusion: ICU features appears to have similar characteristics from the infectious diseases perspective, although variability seems to exist in this large geographical area. (C) 2013 The British Infection Association. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Source
JOURNAL OF INFECTIONVolume
68Issue
2Collections
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