Profiling and Benchmarking Central Nervous System Infections in an Infectious Diseases Intensive Care Unit

Author:

Andrade Hugo Boechat12ORCID,Rocha Ferreira da Silva Ivan3,Espinoza Rodolfo45,da Silva Mayara Secco Torres1,Theodoro Pedro Henrique Nascimento1,Ferreira Marcel Treptow1,Soares Jesus6,Belay Ermias D.6,Sejvar James J.6,Bozza Fernando Augusto17,Cerbino-Neto José8,Japiassú André Miguel1

Affiliation:

1. Intensive Care Unit, Instituto Nacional de Infectologia Evandro Chagas, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (Fiocruz), Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil

2. Sexually Transmitted Diseases Sector, Instituto Biomédico, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Niterói, RJ, Brazil

3. Department of Neurological Sciences, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA

4. Surgical Intensive Care Unit, Hospital Copa Star, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil

5. Intensive Care Unit II, Instituto Nacional do Câncer, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil

6. Division of High-Consequence Pathology and Pathogens, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA

7. Department of Critical Care, Instituto D’Or de Pesquisa e Ensino, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil

8. Immunization and Health Surveillance Research Laboratory, Instituto Nacional de Infectologia Evandro Chagas (INI), Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (Fiocruz), Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil

Abstract

Background There is little information comparing the performance of community acquired central nervous system infections (CNSI) treatment by intensive care units (ICUs) specialized in infectious diseases with treatment at other ICUs. Our objective was to reduce these gaps, creating bases for benchmarking and future case-mix classification. Methods This is a retrospective observational cohort of 785 admissions with 82 cases of CNSI admitted to the ICU of an important Brazilian referral center for infectious diseases (INI) between January 2012 and January 2019. Comparisons were made to data retrospectively collected from the 303,500 intensive care admissions from the Brazilian state health care system included in the Epimed Monitor database. Clinical, epidemiologic, and performance indicators: the standardized mortality rate (SMR) and the standardized resource use rate per ICU surviving patient (SRU) were collected. Results Case-mix infections profile and SMR/SRU data. SUS Mixed medical/surgical ICUs: SMR = 1.26, SRU = 1.59; SUS Neurological ICUs: SMR = 1.17, SRU = 2.23; INI ICU: SMR = 1.1, SRU = 1.1; INI ICU CNSI patients: SMR = 0.95, SRU = 1.01. Conclusions Severe patients with CNSI can be efficiently and effectively treated in an ICU specialized in infectious diseases when compared to mixed medical/surgical and neurological ICUs from the public health system. At the same time, we provided profiling and a case-mix that can help and encourage benchmarking by other institutions and other countries.

Funder

National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

Reference37 articles.

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