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Invasive candidiasis including candidemia is a common healthcare-associated infections with significant morbidity and mortality. The USA does not have mandatory national surveillance for mucocutaneous or invasive candidiasis which complicates estimation of epidemiology and outcomes. The aim of this project was to describe the epidemiology, mortality, and Candida-associated hospital readmissions in hospitalized patients with Candida species infections.
Methods:
This secondary database analysis used clinical microbiology data from adults hospitalized at three large health systems (25-hospitals) in the Greater Houston area totaling over 1.6 million hospitalization days per year from 2018 to 2023. Proportion and rates of Candida cultures per 10,000 hospitalization days were calculated. Risk factors for mortality and Candida-associated readmissions were assessed by multivariable logistic regression.
Results:
Within the study period, 7514 hospitalized patients aged 64 ± 16 years (mean± standard deviation (SD)) with 10,183 unique Candida cultures were identified. Majority of Candida cultures were nosocomial (59%) with wide variability in mean time to positive culture (9 ± 44 days) after admission. Candida specimens were from blood (32%), abdomen (29%), or mucocutaneous (24%) cultures and most commonly C. albicans (44%) or C. glabrata (21%). C. auris increased significantly from 2% of cultures from 2018–20 to 5% in 2021–23 (p < 0.0001). Length of hospital stay was 21 ± 34 days and inpatient mortality was 17%. Multivariable analyses identified hospitalization variables and Candida species predictive of inpatient all-cause mortality and Candida-associated readmissions after initial hospitalization.
Conclusion:
These analyses highlight the significant burden of candidiasis and the emergence of new strains, including C. auris. Ongoing surveillance can refine burden estimates and assess the impact of stewardship and infection control interventions.
The economic burden of Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) is considerable and mostly associated with a high frequency of hospitalizations. Numerous publications have demonstrated that CDI is associated with a higher risk of hospital readmission, but not always a specific rate or attributable to disease recurrence.
Methods:
In this systematic review, we describe the incidence of 30-day CDI-associated readmission rates and the effect of active interventions. Three search engines were utilized for the literature search, and a total of 9 studies were included in this review. Hospital readmission proportions from interventional and observational studies were analyzed through meta-analysis with random effects.
Results:
Two thousand five hundred and twenty-one articles were identified. After screening full-text articles, 9 eligible articles published between 2002 and 2023 met the inclusion criteria. In total, 132,862 CDI patients were evaluated. Thirty-day CDI-associated readmissions were defined as either an ICD9/10 code indicating CDI admission with a prior admission within the past 30 days (n = 4) or a medical chart evaluation of signs and symptoms consistent with CDI (diarrhea) along with a positive diagnostic test (n = 5) with a prior hospitalization for CDI within the past 30 days. Meta-analysis of observational studies estimated 30-day CDI readmissions were 6% (95% CI, 5%–7%). Three studies evaluated the effect of active interventions to reduce CDI-associated 30-day readmission rates. Two of 3 interventions reduced the likelihood of CDI-associated 30-day readmissions.
Conclusions:
This systematic review identified a 6% rate of 30-day CDI-associated hospital readmission. Antimicrobial stewardship efforts and the use of specific therapeutics were shown to reduce these rates.
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