Critical
Care Medicine: October 2015 - Volume 43 - Issue 10 - p 2133–2140
Zhang,
D
Objective:
To assess the timing of appropriate antibiotic therapy as a determinant of
postinfection hospital and ICU lengths of stay in patients with sepsis. Design:
Single-center retrospective cohort study (January 2008–December 2012). Setting:
One thousand two hundred fifty–bed academic hospital. Patients: One thousand
fifty-eight consecutive blood culture positive patients. Interventions: We
retrospectively identified adult patients with severe sepsis or septic shock.
Timing of appropriate antibiotic therapy was determined from blood culture
collection time to the administration of the first dose of antibiotic therapy
with documented in vitro susceptibility against the identified pathogen. We
constructed generalized linear models to examine the determinants of
attributable lengths of stay. Measurements and Main Results: The median
(interquartile range) time from blood culture collection to the administration
of appropriate antibiotic therapy was 6.7 hours (0.0–23.3 hr). Linear
regression analysis adjusting for severity of illness and comorbid conditions
identified time to appropriate antibiotic therapy to be an independent
determinant of postinfection ICU length of stay (0.095-d increase per hr of
time to deliver appropriate antibiotic therapy; 95% CI, 0.057–0.132 d; p <
0.001) and postinfection hospital length of stay (0.134-d increase per hr of
time to deliver appropriate antibiotic therapy; 95% CI, 0.074–0.194 d; p <
0.001). Other independent determinants associated with increasing ICU length of
stay and hospital length of stay were mechanical ventilation (both ICU and
hospital lengths of stay) and incremental peak WBC counts (hospital length of
stay only). Incremental changes in severity of illness assessed by Acute
Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II scores and comorbidity burden
assessed by the Charlson comorbidity score were independently associated with
decreases in ICU length of stay and hospital length of stay. Conclusions: We
identified time to appropriate antibiotic therapy in patients with sepsis to be
an independent determinant of postinfection ICU and hospital lengths of stay.
Clinicians should implement local strategies aimed at timely delivery of
appropriate antibiotic therapy to improve outcomes and reduce length of stay.
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