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Retrospective analysis of nosocomial infections in the intensive care unit of a tertiary hospital in China during 2003 and 2007

Abstract

Background

Nosocomial infections are a major threat to patients in the intensive care unit (ICU). Limited data exist on the epidemiology of ICU-acquired infections in China. This retrospective study was carried out to determine the current status of nosocomial infection in China.

Methods

A retrospective review of nococomial infections in the ICU of a tertiary hospital in East China between 2003 and 2007 was performed. Nosocomial infections were defined according to the definitions of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The overall patient nosocomial infection rate, the incidence density rate of nosocomial infections, the excess length of stay, and distribution of nosocomial infection sites were determined. Then, pathogen and antimicrobial susceptibility profiles were further investigated.

Results

Among 1980 patients admitted over the period of time, the overall patient nosocomial infection rate was 26.8% or 51.0 per 1000 patient days., Lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) accounted for most of the infections (68.4%), followed by urinary tract infections (UTI, 15.9%), bloodstream (BSI, 5.9%), and gastrointestinal tract (GI, 2.5%) infections. There was no significant change in LRTI, UTI and BSI infection rates during the 5 years. However, GI rate was significantly decreased from 5.5% in 2003 to 0.4% in 2007. In addition, A. baumannii, C. albicans and S. epidermidis were the most frequent pathogens isolated in patients with LRTIs, UTIs and BSIs, respectively. The rates of isolates resistant to commonly used antibiotics ranged from 24.0% to 93.1%.

Conclusion

There was a high and relatively stable rate of nosocomial infections in the ICU of a tertiary hospital in China through year 2003–2007, with some differences in the distribution of the infection sites, and pathogen and antibiotic susceptibility profiles from those reported from the Western countries. Guidelines for surveillance and prevention of nosocomial infections must be implemented in order to reduce the rate.

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Background

Nosocomial infections, also called healthcare acquired infections or health care-associated infections, is defined by the CDC as a localized or systemic condition resulting from an adverse reaction to the presence of an infectious agent(s) or its toxin(s), without any evidence that the infection was present or incubating at the time of admission to the acute care setting [1]. Nosocomial infections have become an important public health issue worldwide. Nosocomial infections may result in an excess length of stay in hospital for up to 10 days and an increase in the costs of hospitalization.[2, 3] Nosocomial infections pose a critical threat to patients, especially in the high-risk departments, such as the Intensive Care Unit (ICU).[4, 5] In industrialized countries, nosocomial infections occurs in 2–12% of hospitalized patients, with the rates being up to 21% in ICU, while the rates are 3–18% in hospitalized patients with the rates being up to 54% in ICU. [5–11] In China, there are more than 10,000 hospitals with significant differences among each other in the size, facilities, administration, teaching, research and academic levels. A few studies reported nosocomial infections in China, but these studies were limited in small sample sizes and short period of time, publication in Chinese journals, with or without English abstracts. [11–13] Recently, we carried out a retrospective study to determine the current status of nosocomial infections in a tertiary hospital in East China. All data on nosocomial infections between year 2003 and 2007 were retrieved and reviewed. The overall patient nosocomial infection rate, the incidence density rate of nosocomial infections, the excess length of stay, and distribution of nosocomial infection sites were determined. Then, pathogen and antimicrobial susceptibility profiles were further investigated.

Methods

The study was performed in the Affiliated Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University, which situates in Zhejiang province, East China, with over 1000 beds and one mixed ICU of 13 beds. Since 1996, the hospital started an infection control program, including collection of data on infections acquired in the hospital. In the present study, data from January 2003 to December 2007 for patients in the ICU were retrieved by the Infection Control Team since completed raw data of the patients in ICU were available only after 2003. This retrospective study was approved by the Medical Ethics Committee of The Third Affiliated Hospital, Wenzhou Medical College.

All patients admitted to the ICU for more than 48 hours were monitored for nosocomial infections, which were defined according to the American CDC.[1] Infections developed within 48 hours of discharge from the ICU were also considered to be ICU-acquired unless there was an identified cause after discharge.

The major nosocomial infections, including lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs), urine tract infections (UTIs), bloodstream infections (BSIs) and gastrointestinal tract infections (GIs) were defined as followings. LRTIs refer to lower respiratory tract infection, other than pneumonia, i.e. bronchitis, tracheobronchitis, bronchiolitis, tracheitis, without evidence of pneumonia. BSIs refers to laboratory-confirmed bloodstream infections, UTIs refers to symptomatic urinary tract infections and GIs refers to gastrointestinal tract (esophagus, stomach, small and large bowel, and rectum) infections excluding gastroenteritis and appendicitis. The detailed criteria to diagnose these nosocomial infections were described in the CDC documents [1].

Data on the date and site of infection, patient demographic information and device use were collected for each infection. Moreover, data on the isolated pathogens and their susceptibility testing to antimicrobial agents, if available, were also collected.

The overall patient nosocomial infection rate was calculated by dividing the total number of patients with nosocomial infections by the total number of patients in the ICU (×100) during the defined period of time (i.e. each year). The incidence density rate of nosocomial infections was calculated by dividing the total number of nosocomial infections by the total patient days (×1000) during the defined period of time. The total patients days were calculated by summating the days of each patient in the ICU. In the meantime, the length of stay, which was defined as the overall days of a patient spent in the hospital including the ICU and another department to which the patient was transferred from ICU after stabilization of the conditions. The excess length of stay was then calculated by subtracting the average length of stay for patients without nosocomial infection from that of patients with nosocomial infections.

Statistical analyses were performed using SPSS software version 13.2 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, Ill., USA). Chi-square test and Spearman's rank-correlation coefficients were applied where appropriate. For all analyses, a P value of less than 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results

From 2003 to December 2007, medical data of 1980 patients discharged from the hospital ICU were colleted. The average length of stay was 9.95 days, giving 19700 patient-days. Among these patients, 531 patients acquired a total of 1005 nosocomial infections, including 125 patients with two infections, 33 patients with three infections, 12 patients with four infections and one patient with five infections (Table 1).

Table 1 Distribution of nosocomial infections by site

The overall patient nosocomial infection rate was 26.8%, ranging from 22.6% to 33.2% among the 5 years. There was a significant difference in the infection rates among the 5 years (χ2 = 10.395, P = 0.035). The incidence density rate of nosocomial infections was 51.0 per 1000 patient days, ranging from 38.5 to 59.2 among the 5 years. The excess length of stay was 9.4 days, ranging from 3.3 days in 2003 to 11.5 days in 2004 [see Additional file 1].

Lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) including bronchitis, tracheobronchitis and pneumonia, were the most common infections, occurring in 34.7% of the 1980 patients, followed by urine tract infections (UTIs) (8.1%), and bloodstream infections (BSIs) (3.0%). Among the 1005 nosocomial infections, LRTIs accounted for 68.4%, followed by UTIs (15.9%), BSIs (5.9%) and gastrointestinal tract infections (2.5%). Most (76.0%) patients with nosocomial LRTIs had received mechanical ventilation or tracheotomy before the infections, whereas 50.0% of nosocomial UTIs and 54.2% of nosocomial BSI were catheter associated (Table 1).

There is no significant change in LRTI, UTI and BSI rates during the 5 years. The GI infection rate was significantly decreased from 5.5% in 2003 to 0.4% in 2007 (χ2 = 12.603, P = 0.012), whereas nosocomial infections in other sites was increased significantly (χ2 = 12.858, P = 0.012). The nosocomial infection rates at the surgical sites and skin and soft tissues remained under 2% (Table 1).

Pathogens were isolated and identified from 530 (52.7%) of 1005 nosocomial infections, or, in 338 (63.7%) of the 531 patients. The isolated pathogens responsible for nosocomial infections differed among the infection sites (Table 2). In patients with LRTIs, Acinetobacter baumannii and Klebsiella pneumoniae were the most frequently isolated pathogens, followed by Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus, accounting for more than half of the LRTI related pathogen population. In patients with UTIs, the fungi, especially Candida albicans, were the most common pathogens, followed by Escherichia coli. Staphylococcus epidermidis, E. coli, and S. aureus were the first three most common pathogens for BSIs. In addition, A. baumannii was commonly isolated in UTIs and BSIs (Table 2).

Table 2 Pathogens identified from patients with three major nosocomial infections during 2003–2007

Data on susceptibility testing were available for 3328 isolates, including 195 isolates of E. coli, 359 isolates of S. aureus, and 549 isolates of P. aeruginosa. Overall, 79.3%, 80.0%, 82.3% and 77.8% of E. coli isolates were resistant to trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX) and ciprofloxacin, cefotaxime, and amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, respectively. All S. aureus isolates were sensitive to vancomycin, but 24.0%, 37.9%, 68.1% and 89.6% of isolates were resistant to nitrofurantoin, TMP/SMX, rifampin and ciprofloxacin, respectively. In addition, 93.1%, 41.3% and 66.9% of P. aeruginosa were resistant to TMP/SMX, ciprofloxacin and levofloxacin, respectively [see Additional file 2].

All patients with nosocomial infections were treated with empirical antimicrobial therapies or according to the antimicrobial susceptibility test results, when available. The mortality rates in the patients with nosocomial infections were 20.2% (17/84), 12.2% (12/98), 15.1% (18/119), 15.1% (18/119) and 17.1% (19/111), respectively, in 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007. However, based on the medical records, none of the mortalities were directly related to nosocomial infections.

Discussion

In the present study, the overall patient nosocomial infection rate in the ICU was 26.8% during 2003 and 2007, which was higher than in the ICUs in many industrialized countries where the rates ranging from 7.7% to 16.5%, [14–16] and even higher than the rate (14.7%) observed in 55 ICUs of developing countries.[17] However, the rate is comparable with those reported in some Latin American countries such as Argentina and Brazil [10], and slightly lower than that reported in India. [18]

Over the 5 years, the lowest rate was reported in 2003 (22.6%), and the highest was reported in 2004 (33.2%). One plausible explanation is that in the early of 2003 the country was suffering from the outbreak of highly infectious pneumonia, namely severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). Due to the massive campaign to prevent the spread of SARS, nosocomial infections were indirectly reduced. Being fatigued from the campaign over the previous year, disinfection and sterilization procedures might be loosen in 2004, explaining the moderate rebound in 2004. However, the incidence density rate of nosocomial infections was the lowest in 2004, due to considerably longer stay of some patients in the ICU (Table 1).

The average length of stay in the hospital varied from 3.3 to 11.5 between 2003 and 2007, with the overall average being 9.4 days, which is generally in agreement with those (4.3–15.6 days) reported in European and the United States [19–21], but much less than that reported in Taiwan [22]. However, the it must be also mentioned that SARS outbreak had some impact on the overall length of stay. Although the average stay in the ICU was only 6.6 days, the shortest among the 5 years, the average stay in the hospital was the longest for both patients with and those without nosocomial infections due to the isolation policy imposed in the special period of time.

The distribution of nosocomial infections in the present study differed from that reported in the United States. We found that the LRTIs were the most common infections in the ICU, accounting for 68.4% of overall infections, whereas UTIs was the most frequently reported infections in the ICUs in the United States, with the rate of 31%, followed by pneumonia of 27%. [14] The proportions of UTIs and BSIs in the present study were relatively lower than the data reported in the United States (15.9% vs. 31% and 5.9% vs. 19%, respectively).[14] Although data from Europe revealed same three most common infection sites as the present study did, the absolute proportion of LRTIs was 47%, [6] which was lower than the rate in the present study. The common reasons proposed by studies in many Western countries have suggested that nosocomial LRTIs are mainly due to mechanical ventilation.[5, 14] In China, air pollution, high density of population, and improper health habits such as smoking may also account for the high rate of LRTIs.

The rate of LRTIs slightly, but insignificantly, decreased from 2003 to 2007. There was no change in UTIs and BSIs rates during the 5 years. Notably, the GI rate significantly and stably decreased every year, suggesting an improvement in the environment and food sanitary in the region. Since the lower respiratory tract and the urinary tract were the first two sites that nosocomial infections frequently occurred in the ICU, constituting more than 80% of all nosocomial infections in 2003 and 2004, more efforts were later made to control these two kinds of infections, leading to decreased rates of lower respiratory tract and the urinary tract infections, and correspondingly increased rates of nosocomial infections at other sites.

The present study showed three quarters of LRTI patients received mechanical ventilation or tracheotomy, more than half of nosocomial UTI and BSI cases were catheter associated. These findings are consistent with previous studies, [4, 9, 10, 14, 23] and indicate that the nosocomial infections are often associated with the use of invasive device. Therefore, to effectively reduce nosocomial infections, the use of invasive device should be minimized and specific disinfection precautions taken during the device application.

In the present study, pathogens were isolated from 52.7% of overall nosocomial infections or 63.7% of all patients with nosocomial infections. Similar to the US report, Gram-negative bacteria accounted for 53.2% of the LRTIs in the present study, but the most frequently pathogens were A. baumannii and K. pneurnoniae in the present study whereas P. aeruginosa and S. aureus were the most common pathogens in the US report.[14] Consistent with the US report, fungi was the most frequently pathogen for nosocomial UTIs; Candida accounted for 54.7% of UTIs in the present study, suggesting a relatively narrow profile of pathogens in nosocomial UTIs. S. epidermidis was the most common pathogen for BSIs in both the present study and the US report; however, E. coli, instead of enterococci, was the second common pathogen in the present study. [14]

E. coli was the most common bacterial cause of nosocomial UTIs, and also frequently found in BSIs and LRTIs. It has been shown that the activity of beta-lactam antibiotics against E. coli is greatly reduced as a result of beta-lactamase production, but is restored by the addition of clavulanic acid.[24] In the present study, only 22.2% of E. coli isolates were sensitive to the formula amoxicillin combined with clavulanic acid, while 78.8% of E. coli isolates exhibited susceptibility to the combination in an UK study.[25] A high rate of resistance to TMP/SMX (79.3%) was observed in these E. coli isolates, in contrast to the rate of 40% reported in UK [26]. In addition, there was a high proportion (80.0%) of E. coli isolates resistant to ciprofloxacin, whereas the rate was less than 10% in UK and the United States.[26, 27] These findings indicate that treatment with these antimicrobial agents for nosocomial infections caused by E. coli in China is likely to result in clinical failure in a substantial proportion of patients. We also found that a considerable number of P. aeruginosa isolates were resistant to fluoroquinolones, from 41.3% to ciprofloxacin to 66.9% to levofloxacin, which is comparable with the fluoroquinolone-resistant rates (49% to 64%) reported for patients in 55 ICUs of eight developing countries,[9] but much higher than that (30%) reported in the United States.[28] All S. aureus isolates in the present study were sensitive to vancomycin, which was similar to the observation by Tsuji et al in Japan.[29] In addition, we observed relatively low resistant rates to nitrofurantoin (24.0%) and TMP/SMX (37.9%), which renders these antimicrobial agents suitable for empirical treatment for S. aureus infections.

In China, The Guidelines for Surveillance and Prevention of Nosocomial Infections was established in 1994, and modified in 2000.[30, 31] However, surveillance systems and control measures for nosocomial infections described in the guidelines were not completely implemented and executed in all hospitals, due to the imbalanced development and health care resources within the countries, and less attention to nosocomial infections in some hospitals. Therefore, it is believed that the nosocomial infection rates must be higher in some rural hospitals or even non-tertiary hospitals. In addition, due to empirical use or abuse of antibiotics, the proportion of antibiotic resistant pathogens for nosocomial infections in many lower level hospitals would also be higher than that reported in the present study.

It is noticed that although the mortality rates in patients nosocomial infections were between 15%–20%, there was no mortality directly caused by nosocomial infections. The major reasons for this observation would be the fact that refractory nosocomial infections are relatively less encountered based on our susceptibility testing, which showed that most pathogens were sensitive to many most commonly used antibiotics, indicating that they can be effectively controlled. Moreover, Zhejiang is one of richest provinces in China where medical and healthcare systems are relatively well established and anti-infectious therapies are not a big problems. Finally, it should be emphasized that our hospital is an tertiary infectious hospital with experience, methodologies and facilities to combat against various infections including nosocomial infections.

The present study has some limitations, due to the retrospective nature. First, data on risk factors, except for the use of the medical device, that are potentially associated with nosocomial infections were not available. These factors may include the primary diseases for admission to the ICU, patient resting posture (e.g. semirecumbent or supine body position), continuous prophylactic use of anti-peptic ulcer drugs, utilization of the alcohol-based handrubs and oral care, which need to be taken into consideration in the prospective studies. Second, the data on the identification and isolation of the pathogens and their susceptibility were available only for half of the nosocomial infections. It would produce more accurate data if these numbers were increased. Finally, the data on the clinical consequences were not available for most cases, making it impossible to compare the clinical outcomes between patients with and those without nosocomial infections. However, the present study was able to show that the length of stay in the hospital was significantly increased in patients with nosocomial infections, compared with those without the infections.

Conclusion

In conclusion, there was a high and relatively stable rate of nosocomial infections in the ICU of a tertiary hospital in China through year 2003–2007, with some differences in the distribution of the infection sites, and pathogen and antibiotic susceptibility profiles from those reported in the Western countries. The Guidelines for Surveillance and Prevention of Nosocomial Infections must be implemented national wide in order to reduce the rate.

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Authors' contributions

J-GD, Q-FS and K-CL were the principal investigators who designed and conducted the study, analyzed the data, performed literature research and prepared the manuscript. M-HZ, X-HM and WN participated in the design of the study, contributed to the data analysis and made constructive comments on the manuscript. LH, J-XY, Z-WR, R-WZ, H-JZ and W-FH participated in the design of the study, collected the all required original data, and generated results and tables that were the basis of the manuscript. All authors have read and approved the final manuscript.

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Additional file 1: Overall nosocomial infections (NI) in the intensive care unit (ICU) and the effect on the length of stay in the hospital between 2003 and 2007. Table S1. (DOC 34 KB)

Additional file 2: Antibiotic resistance in organisms isolated during 2003 and 2007. Table S2. (DOC 50 KB)

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Ding, JG., Sun, QF., Li, KC. et al. Retrospective analysis of nosocomial infections in the intensive care unit of a tertiary hospital in China during 2003 and 2007. BMC Infect Dis 9, 115 (2009). https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/1471-2334-9-115

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