Abstract

BackgroundLower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) are the most common hospital-acquired infections on ICUs. They have not only an impact on each patient’s individual health but also result in a considerable financial burden for the healthcare system. Our aim was to determine the costs and the length of stay of patients with ICU-acquired LRTI.MethodsWe used a retrospectively matched cohort design, comparing patients with ICU-acquired LRTI and ICU patients without LRTI. LRTI was diagnosed using the definitions of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Study period was from January to December 2010 analyzing patients from 10 different ICUs (medical, surgical, interdisciplinary). The device utilization ratio was defined as number of ventilator days divided by number of patient days and the device-associated LRTI rate was defined as number of ventilator associated LRTI divided by number of ventilator days. Patients were matched by age, sex, and prospectively obtained Simplified Acute Physiology Score II (SAPS II). The length of ICU stay of control patients needed to be at least as long as that of LRTI-patients before onset of LRTI. We used the Wilcoxon signed-rank test for continuous variables and the McNemar’s test for categorical variables.ResultsThe analyzed ICUs had 40,772 patient days in the study period with a median ventilation utilization ratio of 56 (IQR 42–65). The median device-associated LRTI rate was 3.35 (IQR 0.96-5.36) per 1,000 ventilation days. We analyzed 49 patients with ICU-acquired LRTI and 49 respective controls without LRTI. The median hospital costs for LRTI patients were significantly higher than for patients without LRTI (45,041 € vs. 26,467 €; p < .001). The attributable costs per LRTI patient were 17,015 € (p < .001). Patients with ICU acquired LRTI stayed longer in the hospital than patients without (36 days vs. 24 days; p = 0.011). An LRTI lead to an attributable increase in length of stay by 9 days (p = 0.011).ConclusionsICU-acquired LRTI is associated with increased hospital costs and prolonged hospital stay. Hospital management should therefore implement control measurements to keep the incidence of ICU-acquired LRTI as low as possible.

Highlights

  • Lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) are the most frequent infections acquired on intensive care units (ICU) [1,2,3]

  • There are few clinical studies assessing the attributable costs of ICU-acquired LRTIs in a diagnosis related groups (DRG)-based healthcare system [5,6,7,8]

  • Characteristics of the analyzed ICUs and patients Searching the infection control database we found a total of 90 cases of LRTI-acquired on our analyzed ICUs

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Summary

Introduction

Lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) are the most frequent infections acquired on intensive care units (ICU) [1,2,3]. There are few clinical studies assessing the attributable costs of ICU-acquired LRTIs in a DRG-based (diagnosis related groups) healthcare system [5,6,7,8]. Those studies analyzed only data from the USA. Resource utilization in the European and American healthcare systems are only partially comparable. It is unclear how those differences influence the results of economic studies. This substantiates the need for European studies.

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