Use of multiple antimicrobial drugs by clinical patients: a prognostic index of hospital mortality?
PURPOSE: To quantify the use of multiple and prolonged antibiotics and anti-infective drug therapy in clinical patients in a 144-bed hospital. METHODS: Adult patients (2,790 patients with 3,706 admissions over a period of 19 months) were investigated prospectively regarding treatment with anti-infective agents. The mean age was 57.4 (range, 18.8 - 97 years), and 54.3% were females (2012). RESULTS: Hospital stay was 5.5 (6.7 days (range, 2 - 226 days), with duration up to 10 days for 91.9% of the subjects. Antibiotics or other agents were administered to 1,166 subjects (31.5%), 325 (8.8%) required assistance in the ICU, and a total of 141 (3.8%) died. The association between anti-infective drug therapy and hospital mortality was statistically significant (P < .01) with a strong linear correlation (r = 0.902, P = .014). The quantity of prescribed antimicrobial drugs, age, and need for ICU assistance were independent variables for death by logistic regression analysis. The odds ratio for anti-infective drug therapy was 1.341 (1.043 to 1.725); for age, 1.042 ( 1.026 to 1.058); and for stay in the ICU, 11.226 ( 6.648 to 18.957). CONCLUSIONS: 1) The use of large amounts of anti-infective drug therapy was associated with higher hospital mortality according to both univariate and logistic regression analysis; 2) The adverse influence was less marked than that of hospitalization in ICU but of a similar order of magnitude as age; 3) Further studies should elucidate whether infectious foci, noninfectious morbidity, or drug effects underlie this undesirable concurrence.
Main Authors: | , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Digital revista |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Faculdade de Medicina / USP
2006
|
Online Access: | http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1807-59322006000100004 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|