4.7 Article

Surveillance for Healthcare-Associated Infections: Hospital-Onset Adult Sepsis Events Versus Current Reportable Conditions

Journal

CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 73, Issue 6, Pages 1013-1019

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciab217

Keywords

sepsis; healthcare-associated infections; adult sepsis event; surveillance

Funding

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [U54CK000484]
  2. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality [K08HS025008]

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The CDC's hospital-onset Adult Sepsis Event (HO-ASE) definition can detect many serious nosocomial infections that are missed by currently reportable HAIs. Surveillance for HO-ASE could increase efficiency and clinical significance of monitoring while also identifying new targets for prevention.
Background. US hospitals are required by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to publicly report central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs), catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs), Clostridioides diffficile, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia, and selected surgical site infections for benchmarking and pay-for-performance programs. It is unclear, however, to what extent these conditions capture the full breadth of serious healthcare-associated infections (HAIs). The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC's) hospital-onset Adult Sepsis Event (HO-ASE) definition could facilitate more comprehensive and efficient surveillance for serious HAIs, but the overlap between HO-ASE and currently reportable HAIs is unknown. Methods. We retrospectively assessed the overlap between HO-ASEs and reportable HAIs among adults hospitalized between June 2015-June 2018 in 3 hospitals. Medical record reviews were conducted for 110 randomly selected HO-ASE cases to determine clinical correlates. Results. Among 282 441 hospitalized patients, 2301 (0.8%) met HO-ASE criteria and 1260 (0.4%) had reportable HAIs. In-hospital mortality rates were higher with HO-ASEs than reportable HAIs (28.6% vs 12.9%). Mortality rates for HO-ASE missed by reportable HAIs were substantially higher than mortality rates for reportable HAIs missed by HO-ASE (28.1% vs 6.3%). Reportable HAIs were only present in 334/2301 (14.5%) HO-ASEs, most commonly CLABSIs (6.0% of HO-ASEs), C. difficile (5.0%), and CAUTIs (3.0%). On medical record review, most HO-ASEs were caused by pneumonia (39.1%, of which only 34.9% were ventilator-associated), bloodstream infections (17.4%, of which only 10.5% were central line-associated), non-C. difficile intra-abdominal infections (14.5%), urinary infections (7.3%, of which 87.5% were catheter-associated), and skin/soft tissue infections (6.4%). Conclusions. CDC's HO-ASE definition detects many serious nosocomial infections missed by currently reportable HAIs. HO-ASE surveillance could increase the efficiency and clinical significance of surveillance while identifying new targets for prevention.

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