Preceding Clinical Events in High-risk, Postoperative, Pediatric Cardiac Patients—A Novel Association With Bacteremia

Author:

Shostak Eran12ORCID,Schiller Ofer12,Amir Gabriel23ORCID,Georgy Frenkel23,Shochat Tzippy4,Livni Gilat25,Ben-Zvi Haim26,Manor Orit12,Dagan Ovadia12

Affiliation:

1. Pediatric Cardiac Intensive Care Unit, Schneider Children's Medical Center, Petach Tikva, Israel

2. Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel

3. Pediatric Cardiothoracic Surgery Unit, Schneider Children's Medical Center, Petach Tikva, Israel

4. Statistical Consultant, Rabin Medical Center, Petach Tikva, Israel

5. Pediatric Infectious Diseases Unit, Schneider Children's Medical Center, Petach Tikva, Israel

6. Clinical Microbiology Laboratories, Rabin Medical Center, Beilinson Hospital, Petah-Tikva, Israel

Abstract

Objective: Blood stream infections (BSIs) are well described in pediatric cardiac intensive care units (PCICU). We noted that postoperative high-risk patients may develop BSI after a preceding clinical event (PCE). The study aim was to investigate whether high-risk patients who developed bacteremia experienced more PCEs than a similar group of high-risk patients. Design: Retrospective case-control study. Setting: Referral pediatric center. Patients: We enrolled patients who developed bacteremia from March 2010 to November 2019, after undergoing open-heart surgery at a pediatric center. The control group was comprised of case-matched patients with immediate consecutive same surgery. Interventions: None. Measurements: We recorded operative data, common risk factors, postoperative indicators of organ dysfunction, mortality, and PCEs 72 to 24 h before bacteremia emerged. Main results: A total of 200 patients were included (100 with bacteremia and 100 controls). Key demographic and operative parameters were matched. Bacteremia emerged on average on postoperative day 12.8. Skin-associated Gram-positive bacteria were cultured in 10% and Gram-negative bacteria in 84% of the patients. Average central-venous lines (CVL) duration was 9.5 ± 8.4 days. Postoperatively (72 h), indicators of organ dysfunction were significantly worse in patients with bacteremia, with a higher rate of postoperative complications during PCICU length-of-stay (LOS). In the bacteremia group, 72 to 24 h prior to the development of bacteremia, 92 (92%) PCEs were recorded, as compared to 21 (21%) in controls during their entire LOS (odds ratio [OR] 43.3, confidence interval [CI] 18.2−103.1, P < .0001). Conclusions: We propose a 3-hit model demonstrating that high-risk patients undergoing open-heart surgery have significantly higher risk for bacteremia after a PCE.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

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