Hospitalized Infections in Patients With Rheumatic Disease Hospitalizations in Alaska, 2015‐2018

Author:

Ferucci Elizabeth D.1ORCID,Holck Peter1

Affiliation:

1. Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium, Anchorage

Abstract

ObjectiveRheumatic diseases are associated with increased rates of hospitalized infection, but few studies have included Indigenous North American populations. Our objective was to evaluate the association of rheumatic disease diagnosis during a hospitalization with odds of hospitalized infections in Alaska and assess differences by race.MethodsWe used hospital discharge data from the Alaska Health Facilities Data Reporting Program from 2015 to 2018. We identified people with a rheumatic disease diagnosis based on any hospital discharge diagnosis of a set of rheumatic diseases and compared them to people hospitalized but without a rheumatic disease diagnosis. We determined odds of hospitalized infection by rheumatic disease diagnosis status and type, race, and type of infection. Using multivariable modeling, we determined factors associated with hospitalized infection.ResultsHaving a rheumatic disease diagnosis other than osteoarthritis was associated with 1.90 higher odds of hospitalized infection overall, whereas people of Alaska Native/American Indian (AN/AI) race with rheumatic disease had 2.44 higher odds. The odds varied by rheumatic disease and were increased in all rheumatic diseases except osteoarthritis (0.73). The most common type of hospitalized infection was sepsis, but opportunistic infections and pneumonia were most associated with a rheumatic disease diagnosis. On multivariable analysis, having a rheumatic disease diagnosis other than osteoarthritis, being of older age, and being of AN/AI race were associated with increased odds of hospitalized infection, with an interaction between race and rheumatic disease status.ConclusionThis study confirmed the association of hospitalized infections with rheumatic disease diagnosis (other than osteoarthritis) during hospitalization and identified disparities by race.

Funder

National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Rheumatology

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