Risk and causes of paediatric hospital-acquired bacteraemia in Kilifi District Hospital, Kenya: a prospective cohort study.

BACKGROUND: In sub-Saharan Africa, community-acquired bacteraemia is an important cause of illness and death in children. Our aim was to establish the magnitude and causes of hospital-acquired (nosocomial) bacteraemia in African children. METHODS: We reviewed prospectively collected surveillance da...

Повний опис

Бібліографічні деталі
Автори: Aiken, A, Mturi, N, Njuguna, P, Mohammed, S, Berkley, J, Mwangi, I, Mwarumba, S, Kitsao, B, Lowe, B, Morpeth, S, Hall, A, Khandawalla, I, Scott, J
Формат: Journal article
Мова:English
Опубліковано: 2011
_version_ 1826264313376014336
author Aiken, A
Mturi, N
Njuguna, P
Mohammed, S
Berkley, J
Mwangi, I
Mwarumba, S
Kitsao, B
Lowe, B
Morpeth, S
Hall, A
Khandawalla, I
Scott, J
author_facet Aiken, A
Mturi, N
Njuguna, P
Mohammed, S
Berkley, J
Mwangi, I
Mwarumba, S
Kitsao, B
Lowe, B
Morpeth, S
Hall, A
Khandawalla, I
Scott, J
author_sort Aiken, A
collection OXFORD
description BACKGROUND: In sub-Saharan Africa, community-acquired bacteraemia is an important cause of illness and death in children. Our aim was to establish the magnitude and causes of hospital-acquired (nosocomial) bacteraemia in African children. METHODS: We reviewed prospectively collected surveillance data of 33,188 admissions to Kilifi District Hospital, Kenya, between April 16, 2002, and Sept 30, 2009. We defined bacteraemia as nosocomial if it occurred 48 h or more after admission. We estimated the per-admission risk, daily rate, effect on mortality, and microbial cause of nosocomial bacteraemia and analysed risk factors by multivariable Cox regression. The effect on morbidity was measured as the increase in hospital stay by comparison with time-matched patients without bacteraemia. FINDINGS: The overall risk of nosocomial bacteraemia during this period was 5·9/1000 admissions (95% CI 5·2-6·9) but we recorded an underlying rise in risk of 27% per year. The incidence was 1·0/1000 days in hospital (0·87-1·14), which is about 40 times higher than that of community-acquired bacteraemia in the same region. Mortality in patients with nosocomial bacteraemia was 53%, compared with 24% in community-acquired bacteraemia and 6% in patients without bacteraemia. In survivors, nosocomial bacteraemia lengthened hospital stay by 10·1 days (3·0-17·2). Klebsiella pneumoniae, Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Acinetobacter spp, group D streptococci, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa accounted for three-quarters of nosocomial infections. Nosocomial bacteraemia was significantly associated with severe malnutrition (hazard ratio 2·52, 95% CI 1·79-3·57) and blood transfusion in children without severe anaemia (4·99; 3·39-7·37). INTERPRETATION: Our findings show that although nosocomial bacteraemia is rare, it has serious effects on morbidity and mortality, and the microbiological causes are distinct from those of community-acquired bacteraemia. Nosocomial infections are largely unrecognised or undocumented as a health risk in low-income countries, but they are likely to become public health priorities as awareness of their occurrence increases and as other prominent childhood diseases are progressively controlled. FUNDING: Wellcome Trust.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T20:05:47Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:28dd0b67-c166-4e14-991f-16db0e3d83f0
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T20:05:47Z
publishDate 2011
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:28dd0b67-c166-4e14-991f-16db0e3d83f02022-03-26T12:15:37ZRisk and causes of paediatric hospital-acquired bacteraemia in Kilifi District Hospital, Kenya: a prospective cohort study.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:28dd0b67-c166-4e14-991f-16db0e3d83f0EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2011Aiken, AMturi, NNjuguna, PMohammed, SBerkley, JMwangi, IMwarumba, SKitsao, BLowe, BMorpeth, SHall, AKhandawalla, IScott, J BACKGROUND: In sub-Saharan Africa, community-acquired bacteraemia is an important cause of illness and death in children. Our aim was to establish the magnitude and causes of hospital-acquired (nosocomial) bacteraemia in African children. METHODS: We reviewed prospectively collected surveillance data of 33,188 admissions to Kilifi District Hospital, Kenya, between April 16, 2002, and Sept 30, 2009. We defined bacteraemia as nosocomial if it occurred 48 h or more after admission. We estimated the per-admission risk, daily rate, effect on mortality, and microbial cause of nosocomial bacteraemia and analysed risk factors by multivariable Cox regression. The effect on morbidity was measured as the increase in hospital stay by comparison with time-matched patients without bacteraemia. FINDINGS: The overall risk of nosocomial bacteraemia during this period was 5·9/1000 admissions (95% CI 5·2-6·9) but we recorded an underlying rise in risk of 27% per year. The incidence was 1·0/1000 days in hospital (0·87-1·14), which is about 40 times higher than that of community-acquired bacteraemia in the same region. Mortality in patients with nosocomial bacteraemia was 53%, compared with 24% in community-acquired bacteraemia and 6% in patients without bacteraemia. In survivors, nosocomial bacteraemia lengthened hospital stay by 10·1 days (3·0-17·2). Klebsiella pneumoniae, Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Acinetobacter spp, group D streptococci, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa accounted for three-quarters of nosocomial infections. Nosocomial bacteraemia was significantly associated with severe malnutrition (hazard ratio 2·52, 95% CI 1·79-3·57) and blood transfusion in children without severe anaemia (4·99; 3·39-7·37). INTERPRETATION: Our findings show that although nosocomial bacteraemia is rare, it has serious effects on morbidity and mortality, and the microbiological causes are distinct from those of community-acquired bacteraemia. Nosocomial infections are largely unrecognised or undocumented as a health risk in low-income countries, but they are likely to become public health priorities as awareness of their occurrence increases and as other prominent childhood diseases are progressively controlled. FUNDING: Wellcome Trust.
spellingShingle Aiken, A
Mturi, N
Njuguna, P
Mohammed, S
Berkley, J
Mwangi, I
Mwarumba, S
Kitsao, B
Lowe, B
Morpeth, S
Hall, A
Khandawalla, I
Scott, J
Risk and causes of paediatric hospital-acquired bacteraemia in Kilifi District Hospital, Kenya: a prospective cohort study.
title Risk and causes of paediatric hospital-acquired bacteraemia in Kilifi District Hospital, Kenya: a prospective cohort study.
title_full Risk and causes of paediatric hospital-acquired bacteraemia in Kilifi District Hospital, Kenya: a prospective cohort study.
title_fullStr Risk and causes of paediatric hospital-acquired bacteraemia in Kilifi District Hospital, Kenya: a prospective cohort study.
title_full_unstemmed Risk and causes of paediatric hospital-acquired bacteraemia in Kilifi District Hospital, Kenya: a prospective cohort study.
title_short Risk and causes of paediatric hospital-acquired bacteraemia in Kilifi District Hospital, Kenya: a prospective cohort study.
title_sort risk and causes of paediatric hospital acquired bacteraemia in kilifi district hospital kenya a prospective cohort study
work_keys_str_mv AT aikena riskandcausesofpaediatrichospitalacquiredbacteraemiainkilifidistricthospitalkenyaaprospectivecohortstudy
AT mturin riskandcausesofpaediatrichospitalacquiredbacteraemiainkilifidistricthospitalkenyaaprospectivecohortstudy
AT njugunap riskandcausesofpaediatrichospitalacquiredbacteraemiainkilifidistricthospitalkenyaaprospectivecohortstudy
AT mohammeds riskandcausesofpaediatrichospitalacquiredbacteraemiainkilifidistricthospitalkenyaaprospectivecohortstudy
AT berkleyj riskandcausesofpaediatrichospitalacquiredbacteraemiainkilifidistricthospitalkenyaaprospectivecohortstudy
AT mwangii riskandcausesofpaediatrichospitalacquiredbacteraemiainkilifidistricthospitalkenyaaprospectivecohortstudy
AT mwarumbas riskandcausesofpaediatrichospitalacquiredbacteraemiainkilifidistricthospitalkenyaaprospectivecohortstudy
AT kitsaob riskandcausesofpaediatrichospitalacquiredbacteraemiainkilifidistricthospitalkenyaaprospectivecohortstudy
AT loweb riskandcausesofpaediatrichospitalacquiredbacteraemiainkilifidistricthospitalkenyaaprospectivecohortstudy
AT morpeths riskandcausesofpaediatrichospitalacquiredbacteraemiainkilifidistricthospitalkenyaaprospectivecohortstudy
AT halla riskandcausesofpaediatrichospitalacquiredbacteraemiainkilifidistricthospitalkenyaaprospectivecohortstudy
AT khandawallai riskandcausesofpaediatrichospitalacquiredbacteraemiainkilifidistricthospitalkenyaaprospectivecohortstudy
AT scottj riskandcausesofpaediatrichospitalacquiredbacteraemiainkilifidistricthospitalkenyaaprospectivecohortstudy