Incidence, trends, and outcomes of infection sites among hospitalizations of sepsis: A nationwide study

To determine the trends of infection sites and outcome of sepsis using a national population-based database. Using the Nationwide Inpatient Sample database of the US, adult sepsis hospitalizations and infection sites were identified using a validated approach that selects admissions with explicit IC...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2020-01, Vol.15 (1), p.e0227752-e0227752
Hauptverfasser: Chou, Eric H, Mann, Shaynna, Hsu, Tzu-Chun, Hsu, Wan-Ting, Liu, Carolyn Chia-Yu, Bhakta, Toral, Hassani, Dahlia M, Lee, Chien-Chang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To determine the trends of infection sites and outcome of sepsis using a national population-based database. Using the Nationwide Inpatient Sample database of the US, adult sepsis hospitalizations and infection sites were identified using a validated approach that selects admissions with explicit ICD-9-CM codes for sepsis and diagnosis/procedure codes for acute organ dysfunctions. The primary outcome was the trend of incidence and in-hospital mortality of specific infection sites in sepsis patients. The secondary outcome was the impact of specific infection sites on in-hospital mortality. During the 9-year period, we identified 7,860,687 admissions of adult sepsis. Genitourinary tract infection (36.7%), lower respiratory tract infection (36.6%), and systemic fungal infection (9.2%) were the leading three sites of infection in patients with sepsis. Intra-abdominal infection (30.7%), lower respiratory tract infection (27.7%), and biliary tract infection (25.5%) were associated with highest mortality rate. The incidences of all sites of infections were trending upward. Musculoskeletal infection (annual increase: 34.2%) and skin and skin structure infection (annual increase: 23.0%) had the steepest increase. Mortality from all sites of infection has decreased significantly (trend p
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0227752