Clinical Characteristics and Nomogram for Predicting Mortality in Patients with Postoperative Bloodstream Infection in Surgical Intensive Care Unit

Background. Bloodstream infection is amongst the leading causes of mortality for critical postoperative patients. However, data, especially from developing countries, are scary. Clinical decision-making tools for predicting postoperative bloodstream infection-related mortality are important but stil...

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Main Authors: Zengli Xiao, Yao Sun, Huiying Zhao, Youzhong An
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-01-01
Series:International Journal of Clinical Practice
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2024/9911996
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author Zengli Xiao
Yao Sun
Huiying Zhao
Youzhong An
author_facet Zengli Xiao
Yao Sun
Huiying Zhao
Youzhong An
author_sort Zengli Xiao
collection DOAJ
description Background. Bloodstream infection is amongst the leading causes of mortality for critical postoperative patients. However, data, especially from developing countries, are scary. Clinical decision-making tools for predicting postoperative bloodstream infection-related mortality are important but still lacking. Objective. To analyze the distribution of pathogens and develop a nomogram for predicting mortality in patients with postoperative bloodstream infection in the surgical intensive care unit. Methods. The clinical data, infection and pathogen-related data, and prognosis of patients with PBSI in the SICU from January 2017 to January 2022 were retrospectively collected. The distribution of pathogens and clinical characteristics of patients with PBSI were analyzed. The patients were assigned to a died group and a survived group according to their survival status. Independent predictors for mortality were identified by univariate and multivariate analyses. A nomogram for predicting PBSI-related death was developed based on these independent predictors. Calibration and decision-curve analysis were established to evaluate the nomogram. We collected postoperative patients admitted to our center from February 2022 to June 2023 as external validation sets to verify the nomogram. We also add the Brier score to further validate the model. Results. In the training set, 7128 patients admitted to the SICU after different types of surgery were collected. A total of 198 patients and 308 pathogens were finally enrolled. The mean age of patients with PBSI was 64.38 ± 16.22 (range 18–90) years, and 56.1% were male. Forty-five patients (22.7%) died in the hospital. Five independent predictors including BMI, APACHE II score, estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), urine volume in the first 24 hours after surgery, and peak temperature before positive blood cultures were selected to establish the nomogram. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for the prediction model was 0.922. Calibration curve and decision curve analysis showed good performance of the nomogram. Seventy patients with PBSI were collected as an external validation set, and thirteen patients died in this set. The external validation set was used to validate the nomogram, and the results showed that the AUC was 0.930 which was higher than that in the training set indicating that the nomogram had a good discrimination. The brier score was 0.087 for training set and 0.050 for validation set. Conclusions. PBSI was one of the key issues that clinicians were concerned and could be assessed with a good predictive model using simple clinical factors.
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spelling doaj-art-104a8691620e4d8ba351e06a9ef5b3e62025-01-10T00:00:01ZengWileyInternational Journal of Clinical Practice1742-12412024-01-01202410.1155/2024/9911996Clinical Characteristics and Nomogram for Predicting Mortality in Patients with Postoperative Bloodstream Infection in Surgical Intensive Care UnitZengli Xiao0Yao Sun1Huiying Zhao2Youzhong An3The Department of Critical Care UnitThe Department of Critical Care UnitThe Department of Critical Care UnitThe Department of Critical Care UnitBackground. Bloodstream infection is amongst the leading causes of mortality for critical postoperative patients. However, data, especially from developing countries, are scary. Clinical decision-making tools for predicting postoperative bloodstream infection-related mortality are important but still lacking. Objective. To analyze the distribution of pathogens and develop a nomogram for predicting mortality in patients with postoperative bloodstream infection in the surgical intensive care unit. Methods. The clinical data, infection and pathogen-related data, and prognosis of patients with PBSI in the SICU from January 2017 to January 2022 were retrospectively collected. The distribution of pathogens and clinical characteristics of patients with PBSI were analyzed. The patients were assigned to a died group and a survived group according to their survival status. Independent predictors for mortality were identified by univariate and multivariate analyses. A nomogram for predicting PBSI-related death was developed based on these independent predictors. Calibration and decision-curve analysis were established to evaluate the nomogram. We collected postoperative patients admitted to our center from February 2022 to June 2023 as external validation sets to verify the nomogram. We also add the Brier score to further validate the model. Results. In the training set, 7128 patients admitted to the SICU after different types of surgery were collected. A total of 198 patients and 308 pathogens were finally enrolled. The mean age of patients with PBSI was 64.38 ± 16.22 (range 18–90) years, and 56.1% were male. Forty-five patients (22.7%) died in the hospital. Five independent predictors including BMI, APACHE II score, estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), urine volume in the first 24 hours after surgery, and peak temperature before positive blood cultures were selected to establish the nomogram. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for the prediction model was 0.922. Calibration curve and decision curve analysis showed good performance of the nomogram. Seventy patients with PBSI were collected as an external validation set, and thirteen patients died in this set. The external validation set was used to validate the nomogram, and the results showed that the AUC was 0.930 which was higher than that in the training set indicating that the nomogram had a good discrimination. The brier score was 0.087 for training set and 0.050 for validation set. Conclusions. PBSI was one of the key issues that clinicians were concerned and could be assessed with a good predictive model using simple clinical factors.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2024/9911996
spellingShingle Zengli Xiao
Yao Sun
Huiying Zhao
Youzhong An
Clinical Characteristics and Nomogram for Predicting Mortality in Patients with Postoperative Bloodstream Infection in Surgical Intensive Care Unit
International Journal of Clinical Practice
title Clinical Characteristics and Nomogram for Predicting Mortality in Patients with Postoperative Bloodstream Infection in Surgical Intensive Care Unit
title_full Clinical Characteristics and Nomogram for Predicting Mortality in Patients with Postoperative Bloodstream Infection in Surgical Intensive Care Unit
title_fullStr Clinical Characteristics and Nomogram for Predicting Mortality in Patients with Postoperative Bloodstream Infection in Surgical Intensive Care Unit
title_full_unstemmed Clinical Characteristics and Nomogram for Predicting Mortality in Patients with Postoperative Bloodstream Infection in Surgical Intensive Care Unit
title_short Clinical Characteristics and Nomogram for Predicting Mortality in Patients with Postoperative Bloodstream Infection in Surgical Intensive Care Unit
title_sort clinical characteristics and nomogram for predicting mortality in patients with postoperative bloodstream infection in surgical intensive care unit
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2024/9911996
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