Login / Signup

Mortality incidence among critically ill burn patients infected with multidrug-resistant organisms: A retrospective cohort study.

Moustafa EllithyHassan A MitwallyMohamed SaadRanjan MathiasAdila ShaukatHani ElzeerSunil Hassan KoyaZia MahmoodKhaled Gazwi
Published in: Scars, burns & healing (2021)
Many factors affect mortality in burn patients admitted to the intensive care unit, such as age, total body surface area involved in the injury, and others. In this retrospective study, we evaluated whether wound infection with a bacterial organism resistant to multiple classes of antibiotics (multidrug-resistant) is considered an independent risk factor for mortality in critically ill burn patients. We included 58 patients requiring intensive care admission with burn injuries involving 15% or more of the total body surface area or less than 15% but with facial involvement. A total of 33 patients were infected with multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs) and 25 patients with non-MDROs. Six patients (18.2%) from the MDRO group died versus four (16%) in the non-MDRO group. The MDRO group required a longer stay in hospital and an average of one more day on a mechanical ventilator. We concluded that wound infection with MDROs might not increase mortality when compared to wound infection with non-MDROs, although other studies with a larger number of patients involved need to be conducted to validate these results.
Keyphrases