TY - JOUR
T1 - Long-term Survival Following Bacteremia or Fungemia
AU - Leibovici, Leonard
AU - Samra, Zmira
AU - Konigsberger, Hanna
AU - Drucker, Moshe
AU - Ashkenazi, Shai
AU - Pitlik, Silvio D.
PY - 1995/9
Y1 - 1995/9
N2 - To delineate long-term survival after an episode of bacteremia or fungemia and risk factors for mortality. Cohort study. A 900-bed university hospital in Israel. Study group comprising 1991 patients 18 years of age or older in whom bacteremia or fungemia were detected between March 1988 and October 1992, and a control group comprising 1991 inpatients without any infectious diseases, matched for age, sex, department, date of admission, and underlying disorders. None. Interval from the date of the first positive blood culture (study group) or from date of the identical hospital day (in the matched control patient) to the date of death as recorded in the Israeli National Population registry or, if alive, to June 1, 1994. The median age of patients was 72 years. In the study group, the mortality rate was 26% at 1 month, 43% at 6 months, 48% at 1 year, and 63% at 4 years, and the median survival was 16.2 months. In the control group, the mortality rate was 7% at 1 month, 27% at 1 year, and 42% at 4 years, and the median survival was greater than 75 months (P<.001). Factors significantly and independently associated with mortality in bacteremic patients were functional class (median survival, 0.5 month in bedridden patients), septic shock (median survival, 0.2 month), serum albumin (median survival, 1.1 months in the lowest quartile), serum creatinine (median survival, 2.9 months in the highest quartile), age (median survival, 2.9 months in the highest quartile [age >80 years]), inappropriate empirical antibiotic treatment (median survival, 4.9 months), nosocomial infection (median survival, 9.6 months), and malignancy (median survival, 2.4 months). Bacteremia is associated with high short-term mortality, but also a sign of severely curtailed long-term prognosis, especially in patients with low functional capacity, low serum albumin, high serum creatinine, nosocomial infections, malignancy, inappropriate antimicrobial treatment, and septic shock and in elderly patients. (JAMA. 1995;274:807-812).
AB - To delineate long-term survival after an episode of bacteremia or fungemia and risk factors for mortality. Cohort study. A 900-bed university hospital in Israel. Study group comprising 1991 patients 18 years of age or older in whom bacteremia or fungemia were detected between March 1988 and October 1992, and a control group comprising 1991 inpatients without any infectious diseases, matched for age, sex, department, date of admission, and underlying disorders. None. Interval from the date of the first positive blood culture (study group) or from date of the identical hospital day (in the matched control patient) to the date of death as recorded in the Israeli National Population registry or, if alive, to June 1, 1994. The median age of patients was 72 years. In the study group, the mortality rate was 26% at 1 month, 43% at 6 months, 48% at 1 year, and 63% at 4 years, and the median survival was 16.2 months. In the control group, the mortality rate was 7% at 1 month, 27% at 1 year, and 42% at 4 years, and the median survival was greater than 75 months (P<.001). Factors significantly and independently associated with mortality in bacteremic patients were functional class (median survival, 0.5 month in bedridden patients), septic shock (median survival, 0.2 month), serum albumin (median survival, 1.1 months in the lowest quartile), serum creatinine (median survival, 2.9 months in the highest quartile), age (median survival, 2.9 months in the highest quartile [age >80 years]), inappropriate empirical antibiotic treatment (median survival, 4.9 months), nosocomial infection (median survival, 9.6 months), and malignancy (median survival, 2.4 months). Bacteremia is associated with high short-term mortality, but also a sign of severely curtailed long-term prognosis, especially in patients with low functional capacity, low serum albumin, high serum creatinine, nosocomial infections, malignancy, inappropriate antimicrobial treatment, and septic shock and in elderly patients. (JAMA. 1995;274:807-812).
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0029147774&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1001/jama.1995.03530100047033
DO - 10.1001/jama.1995.03530100047033
M3 - ???researchoutput.researchoutputtypes.contributiontojournal.article???
C2 - 7650804
AN - SCOPUS:0029147774
SN - 0098-7484
VL - 274
SP - 807
EP - 812
JO - JAMA - Journal of the American Medical Association
JF - JAMA - Journal of the American Medical Association
IS - 10
ER -