Emerging Infectious Diseases (Oct 2021)

Population-Based Study of Bloodstream Infection Incidence and Mortality Rates, Finland, 2004–2018

  • Keiju S.K. Kontula,
  • Kirsi Skogberg,
  • Jukka Ollgren,
  • Asko Järvinen,
  • Outi Lyytikäinen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2710.204826
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 10
pp. 2560 – 2569

Abstract

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We evaluated the incidence, outcomes, and causative agents of bloodstream infections (BSI) in Finland during 2004–2018 by using data from the national registries. We identified a total of 173,715 BSIs; annual incidence increased from 150 to 309 cases/100,000 population. BSI incidence rose most sharply among persons >80 years of age. The 1-month case-fatality rate decreased from 13.0% to 12.6%, but the 1-month all-cause mortality rate rose from 20 to 39 deaths/100,000 population. BSIs caused by Escherichia coli increased from 26% to 30% of all BSIs. BSIs caused by multidrug-resistant microbes rose from 0.4% to 2.8%, mostly caused by extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing E. coli. We observed an increase in community-acquired BSIs, from 67% to 78%. The proportion of patients with severe underlying conditions rose from 14% to 23%. Additional public health and healthcare prevention efforts are needed to curb the increasing trend in community-acquired BSIs and antimicrobial drug–resistant E. coli.

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