Worldwide emergence of extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-E) had become a major problem in ICU, with at least 10% of incidence at the admission in Europe. A systematic rectal swab is used in 70% of French ICU to detect intestinal ESBL-E carriage The relationship between intestinal carriage and ICU-acquired infection is not perfectly known. The investigators conducted a five years study monocentric retrospective observational cohort in patients with presence of extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae in systematic rectal swabs to investigate which type of infections and which bacteria are involved. The investigators also collect data about antibiotherapy used to treat these infections.
Intestinal carriage of extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-E) had become a major problem in general population, morover in intensive care units. Systematic rectal swab for screening is done in 70% of French ICU in routine. Some studies had show a good negative predictive value of this test for ICU-acquired infection (for example ventilator-associated pneumoniae), but a poor predictive positive value. The precise relationship between intestinal carriage and ICU-acquired infection is not perfectly known. Probabilist antibiotherapy with carbapenem for ESBL-E suspected infection are currently recommanded by national and european Guidelines, particulary in case of shock or immunodepression. A ESBL-E systematic screening-guided strategy for probabilist antibiotherapy could be interesting, and could lead to a carbapenem or a carbapenem-sparing focused antibiotherapy. The investigators conducted a monocentric retrospective observational cohort study in patients with presence of extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae in systematic rectal swabs to investigate the number of ESBL-E related infections, the site of these infections and which species of bacteriae are involved. They also investigate which was the antibiotherapy administered, and investigate what factors lead clinicians to treat the infection with carbapenem antibiotherapy.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
350
observational
CHRU de Brest
Brest, France
proportion of ESBL-E related infection in ICU-aquired infection
proportion of ESBL-E related infection in ICU-aquired infection
Time frame: 28 days
use of carbapenem antibiotherapy
use of carbapenem antibiotherapy
Time frame: 28 days
length of ICU-stay
length of ICU-stay
Time frame: 28 days
length of hospital-stay
length of hospital-stay
Time frame: 28 days
mortality rate in ICU
death in ICU
Time frame: 28 days
mortality in hospital
death in hospital
Time frame: 28 days
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