Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11452/25710
Title: Nosocomial candidemia in adults: Risk and prognostic factors
Authors: Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Tıbbi Mikrobiyoloji Anabilim Dalı.
Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Biyoistatistik Anabilim Dalı.
0000-0003-0463-6818
0000-0002-4803-8206
0000-0002-4759-9634
Gürcüoğlu, Emel
Akalın, Halis
Ener, Beyza
Ocakoğlu, Gökhan
Sınırtaş, Melda
Akçağlar, Sevim
Yılmaz, Emel
Evci, Canan
Oral, Haluk Barbaros
AAU-8952-2020
K-7285-2012
AAH-5180-2021
AAG-8523-2021
24502872100
57207553671
15053025300
15832295800
6505818048
6506194958
22037135100
22034011200
7004498001
Keywords: Nosocomial candidemia
Mortality
Risk factors
Epidemiology
Mycology
Candida albicans
Issue Date: Dec-2010
Publisher: Masson Editeur
Citation: Gürcüoğlu, E. vd. (2010). "Nosocomial candidemia in adults: Risk and prognostic factors". Journal de Mycologie Medicale, 20(4), 269-278.
Abstract: Objective of the study. - Determination of the risk and prognostic factors for candidemias that develop in adult patients (in a general hospital patient population, intensive care unit [ICU] patients and patients with solid organ malignancy). Patients. - The risk factors for candidemia were investigated in 256 adult patients (>= 18 years old). Patients and methods. - The risk and prognostic factors for candidemia were investigated in adult patients using a matched case-control design. Results. - We found that a total of 457 adult patients developed nosocomial candidemia in our hospital over the 12-year study period. Candida albicans (46.8%) was the most common etiological agent in candidemia, whereas C. parapsilosis (27%) was isolated as the second most frequent species. The ratio of C. glabrata was 3.8%. The risk factors for candidemia were investigated in 256 patients for whom full medical record information was available. Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) (OR 1.718; 95% CI 1.139-2.594, P = 0.01), antacid use (OR 1.841; 95% CI 1.239-2.735, P = 0.003) and candiduria (OR 2.095; 95% CI 1.213-3.617, P = 0.008) were detected as independent risk factors for candidemia among all affected patients. Removal of the central venous catheter (OR 1.976; 95% CI 1.219-3.202, P = 0.006) was protective against mortality. Conclusion. - Candiduria, and use of TPN were the most frequently encountered independent risk factors in almost all patient groups in our study as well as in other studies on this topic, so they should be taken into account in the evaluation of patients with suspicion of candidemia.
URI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mycmed.2010.07.006
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1156523310000806
http://hdl.handle.net/11452/25710
ISSN: 1156-5233
1773-0449
Appears in Collections:Scopus
Web of Science

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