Abstract
<h3>Background</h3> The National Burn Repository 2019 reports burn-related data from July 2017- June 2018 of 1,101 hospitals and 221,519 patients. Large total body surface area (TBSA) burns and inhalational lung injury (ILI) are major risks for a complicated course requiring critical care support and infections are the most serious and most common complications of burns. The aim of this study is to evaluate the burden of multidrug resistant organisms (MDRO) in critically-ill burn patients. <h3>Methods</h3> Our burn center receives 3,000 visits and provides treatment for around 1300 patients annually. In 2018, 225 patients were admitted to the hospital's 9-bed critical-care burn unit. Patients who had burns more than 10% TBSA and/or ILI were included in the study if they survived more than 48 hours. The records were reviewed for length of stay (LOS), mortality, as well as MDRO clinical as well surveillance cultures. <h3>Results</h3> 55 patients were included in the study with 39 (71%) male and with an average LOS of 11 days. Inhalational lung injury was found to be present in 58% of patients. 8 patients died who had an average TBSA burn of 60%. While patients who were discharged alive had average TBSA burns of 29% and average LOS of 26 days. 22% of discharged patients were found to have MDRO acquisition detected by clinical cultures and 14% of patients had MRSA detected by follow-up nasal screening. <h3>Conclusions</h3> MDRO colonization is common in severely-ill burn patients. This highlights the importance of more aggressive MDRO surveillance in this population for early detection and prevention of hospital-associated infections and outbreaks.
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