Global prevalence and characteristics of infections and clinical outcomes in hospitalised patients with cirrhosis: a prospective cohort study for the CLEARED Consortium

Infections have a poor prognosis in inpatients with cirrhosis. We aimed to determine regional variations in infections and their association with clinical outcomes in a global cohort of inpatients with cirrhosis. In this prospective cohort study initiated by the CLEARED Consortium, we enrolled adult...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:The lancet. Gastroenterology & hepatology 2024-11, Vol.9 (11), p.997-1009
Hauptverfasser: Cao, Zhujun, Choudhury, Ashok K, Topazian, Mark, Idilman, Ramazan, Seto, Wai-Kay, Bush, Brian J, Thacker, Leroy R, Bajaj, Jasmohan S, Kumar, Shiva, Gadano, Adrián, Tudehope, Fiona, Prudence, Alexander, Gibson, Robert, Zekry, Amany, Doyle, Adam, Si, Hooi Ling, Kim, Yu Sung, Riordan, Stephen, MacQuillan, Gerry, Michalczuk, Matheus, Farias, Alberto, Zitelli, Patricia, Bera, Chinmay, Faisal, Nabiha, Tandon, Puneeta, Lah, Ponan Claude Regis, Benítez, Carlos, Arrese, Marco, Zhu, Chuanwu, Su, Minghua, Wang, Xinrui, Gao, Yanhang, Peng, Feng, Zhao, Caiyan, Cai, Yijing, Guo, Feng, Wang, Xiaozhong, Zhang, Ningping, Li, Hai, Zheng, Xin, Tang, Hong, Yan, Libo, Wei, Linlin, Xu, Zhen, Gao, Haibing, Rao, Qunfang, Chen, Jinjun, Liu, Chenghai, Deng, Huan, Hu, Peng, Li, Jie, Schultheiß, Michael, Belimi, Hibat Allah, Mostafa, Alaa, Fisseha, Henok, Venkatachalapathy, Suresh Vasan, Rajoriya, Neil, Leith, Damien, Forrest, Ewan, Danielle, Adebayo, Kennedy, James, Yung, Diana, Mani, Iliana, Kulkarni, Anand, Sarin, Shiv K, Eapen, C E, Duseja, Ajay, Saraya, Anoop, Rela, Mohammad, Arora, Anil, Roy, Akash, Anand, A C, Cabrera, Araceli Bravo, Gutierrez, Oscar Morales, Ramos-Pineda, Abraham, Barradas, Mauricio Castillo, Félix-Tellez, Francisco, Cordova-Gallardo, Jacqueline, Afendi, Nik Arsyad Nik Muhamad, Nyam, David P, Okeke, Edith N, Patwa, Yashwi Haresh Kumar, Tan, Hiang Keat, Lun, Liou Wei, Ho, Wei Ling Danielle, Thanapirom, Kessarin, Teerasarntipan, Tongluk, Aslan, Rahmi, Yildirim, Abdullah Emre, Barutcu, Sezgin, Karasu, Zeki, Ucbilek, Enver, Dinçer, Dinç, Albhaisi, Somaya, Shaw, Jawaid, Vargas, Hugo, Biggins, Scott W, Kappus, Matthew, Negrillo, Ricardo Cabello, Verna, Elizabeth
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Infections have a poor prognosis in inpatients with cirrhosis. We aimed to determine regional variations in infections and their association with clinical outcomes in a global cohort of inpatients with cirrhosis. In this prospective cohort study initiated by the CLEARED Consortium, we enrolled adults (aged >18 years) with cirrhosis who were non-electively admitted to 98 hospitals from 26 countries or regions across six continents between Nov 5, 2021, and Dec 10, 2022. Data at admission, during hospitalisation, and for 30 days after discharge were collected through patient reports and chart reviews. Collected data included demographics; country and country income level per World Bank classifications (high-income countries [HICs], upper-middle-income countries [UMICs], and low-income or lower-middle-income countries [L–LMICs]); comorbidities; characteristics related to cirrhosis and the infections, including types, culture results, and drug resistance profile; antibiotic use; and disease course while hospitalised and for 30 days post-discharge. The primary outcome was in-hospital death or hospice referral in those with versus those without an admission infection (defined by the presence of infection on or within 48 h of admission). Multivariable log-binomial regression for in-hospital death or hospice referral was performed to identify risk factors. Of 4550 patients screened, 4238 patients (mean age 56·1 years [SD 13·3]; 2711 [64·0%] male and 1527 [36·0%] female) with complete data were enrolled. 1351 (31·9%) had admission infections. A higher proportion of patients in L–LMICs had infections (318 [41·7%] of 762 vs 444 [58·3%] without infection) than in UMICs (588 [30·6%] of 1922 vs 1334 [69·4%]) or HICs (445 [28·6%] of 1554 vs 1109 [71·4%]). Patients with admission infections had worse severity of cirrhosis and were more likely to have had an infection or been hospitalised in the preceding 6 months. The most common specific infection types were spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (391 [28·9%] of 1351), pneumonia (233 [17·2%]), and urinary tract infections (193 [14·3%]). 549 (40·6%) patients were culture-positive for bacterial or fungal infections, with the lowest culture-positive rates in Africa and mainland China. Most of the isolated organisms were Gram-negative (345 [63%] of 549), then Gram-positive (157 [29%]), and then fungi or mixed (47 [9%]), with Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Enterococcus spp being the top three isolated pathogens. The o
ISSN:2468-1253
2468-1253
DOI:10.1016/S2468-1253(24)00224-3