Incidence and risk factors for catheter-associated urinary tract infection in 623 intensive care units throughout 37 Asian, African, Eastern European, Latin American, and Middle Eastern nations: A multinational prospective research of INICC
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Published:2024-01-04
Issue:5
Volume:45
Page:567-575
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ISSN:0899-823X
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Container-title:Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Infect. Control Hosp. Epidemiol.
Author:
Rosenthal Victor DanielORCID, Yin RuijieORCID, Brown Eric Christopher, Lee Brandon HochahnORCID, Rodrigues Camilla, Myatra Sheila NainanORCID, Kharbanda MohitORCID, Rajhans PrasadORCID, Mehta YatinORCID, Todi Subhash Kumar, Basu Sushmita, Sahu Suneeta, Mishra Shakti BedantaORCID, Chawla RajeshORCID, Nair Pravin K.ORCID, Arjun RajalakshmiORCID, Singla Deepak, Sandhu Kavita, Palaniswamy VijayanandORCID, Bhakta Arpita, Nor Mohd-Basri MatORCID, Chian-Wern TaiORCID, Bat-Erdene Ider, Acharya Subhash P., Ikram Aamer, Tumu Nellie, Tao Lili, Alvarez Gustavo Andres, Valderrama-Beltran Sandra Liliana, Jiménez-Alvarez Luisa FernandaORCID, Henao-Rodas Claudia Milena, Gomez Katherine, Aguilar-Moreno Lina Alejandra, Cano-Medina Yuliana AndreaORCID, Zuniga-Chavarria Maria Adelia, Aguirre-Avalos GuadalupeORCID, Sassoe-Gonzalez Alejandro, Aleman-Bocanegra Mary Cruz, Hernandez-Chena Blanca Estela, Villegas-Mota Maria IsabelORCID, Aguilar-de-Moros DaisyORCID, Castañeda-Sabogal Alex, Medeiros Eduardo AlexandrinoORCID, Dueñas Lourdes, Carreazo Nilton YhuriORCID, Salgado Estuardo, Abdulaziz-Alkhawaja SafaaORCID, Agha Hala Mounir, El-Kholy Amani AliORCID, Daboor Mohammad Abdellatif, Guclu Ertugrul, Dursun OguzORCID, Koksal IftiharORCID, Havan MerveORCID, Ozturk-Deniz Suna SecilORCID, Yildizdas Dincer, Okulu Emel, Omar Abeer Aly, Memish Ziad A.ORCID, Janc JarosławORCID, Hlinkova Sona, Duszynska WieslawaORCID, Horhat-Florin George, Raka Lul, Petrov Michael M.ORCID, Jin Zhilin
Abstract
AbstractObjective:To identify urinary catheter (UC)–associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI) incidence and risk factors.Design:A prospective cohort study.Setting:The study was conducted across 623 ICUs of 224 hospitals in 114 cities in 37 African, Asian, Eastern European, Latin American, and Middle Eastern countries.Participants:The study included 169,036 patients, hospitalized for 1,166,593 patient days.Methods:Data collection took place from January 1, 2014, to February 12, 2022. We identified CAUTI rates per 1,000 UC days and UC device utilization (DU) ratios stratified by country, by ICU type, by facility ownership type, by World Bank country classification by income level, and by UC type. To estimate CAUTI risk factors, we analyzed 11 variables using multiple logistic regression.Results:Participant patients acquired 2,010 CAUTIs. The pooled CAUTI rate was 2.83 per 1,000 UC days. The highest CAUTI rate was associated with the use of suprapubic catheters (3.93 CAUTIs per 1,000 UC days); with patients hospitalized in Eastern Europe (14.03) and in Asia (6.28); with patients hospitalized in trauma (7.97), neurologic (6.28), and neurosurgical ICUs (4.95); with patients hospitalized in lower–middle-income countries (3.05); and with patients in public hospitals (5.89).The following variables were independently associated with CAUTI: Age (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 1.01; P < .0001), female sex (aOR, 1.39; P < .0001), length of stay (LOS) before CAUTI-acquisition (aOR, 1.05; P < .0001), UC DU ratio (aOR, 1.09; P < .0001), public facilities (aOR, 2.24; P < .0001), and neurologic ICUs (aOR, 11.49; P < .0001).Conclusions:CAUTI rates are higher in patients with suprapubic catheters, in middle-income countries, in public hospitals, in trauma and neurologic ICUs, and in Eastern European and Asian facilities.Based on findings regarding risk factors for CAUTI, focus on reducing LOS and UC utilization is warranted, as well as implementing evidence-based CAUTI-prevention recommendations.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
2 articles.
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