Microorganisms (Jul 2024)

Risk Factors, Pathogens, and Outcomes of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia in Non-Cardiac Surgical Patients: A Retrospective Analysis

  • Po-Hsun Chang,
  • Ting-Lung Lin,
  • Ying-Ju Chen,
  • Wei-Hung Lai,
  • I-Ling Chen,
  • Hui-Chuan Chang,
  • Yu-Cheng Lin,
  • Yu-Hung Lin,
  • Wei-Feng Li,
  • Yueh-Wei Liu,
  • Chih-Chi Wang,
  • Shih-Feng Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms12071422
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
p. 1422

Abstract

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Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is a critical hospital-acquired infection following non-cardiac surgeries, leading to poor outcomes. This study identifies VAP risk factors in non-cardiac surgical patients and determines the causative pathogens. A retrospective analysis with 1:4 propensity-score matching was conducted on patients in a surgical intensive care unit (ICU) from 2010 to 2020 at a private tertiary medical center. Among 99 VAP patients, the mortality rate was 64.7%. VAP risk factors included prolonged mechanical ventilation (odds ratio [OR] 6.435; p p p p = 0.021). The 30-day mortality risk factors in the VAP group were late-onset VAP (OR 3.450; p = 0.022), inappropriate antibiotic treatment (OR 4.083; p = 0.041), and undergoing gastrointestinal surgeries (OR 4.776; p = 0.019). Nearly half of the Gram-negative infections were resistant strains, and a third were polymicrobial infections. Non-cardiac surgical patients with VAP face adverse hospital outcomes. Identifying high-risk patients and understanding VAP’s resistant and microbial nature are crucial for appropriate treatment and improved health outcomes.

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