Revisão Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

The state of the science

2004; Elsevier BV; Volume: 32; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.ajic.2003.12.001

ISSN

1527-3296

Autores

Barry M. Farr,

Tópico(s)

Health Sciences Research and Education

Resumo

This review was derived from the first Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC) "State of the Science" lecture, which was delivered at the 30th Annual APIC Educational Conference and International Meeting in San Antonio, Texas, in June 2003. It begins with a few comments about science in general and then moves on to comments about the current state of the science in question, the epidemiology and prevention of adverse events associated with health care. It focuses on the topic that has been both the traditional and the continuing predominant focus of health care epidemiology, health care–associated infections. Of the hundreds of recent publications in this field, many were very good. In the space allotted, however, the review will necessarily cover only selected topics that will hopefully provide some insight into the current state of the science. Science has been defined by Webster's Dictionary as "systematized knowledge derived from observation, study, and experimentation carried on to determine the nature or principles of what is being studied." At a recent Festschrift honoring the career of my scientific mentor, Dr Jack Gwaltney, Jack's mentor Dr Bill Jordan commented on the effects of chance on science and on scientific careers. Many are aware that a Penicillium spore landed by chance on an agar plate seeded with Staphylococcus aureus by Alexander Fleming and that this led to his discovery of penicillin and the dawn of the antibiotic era. Many like to emphasize the serendipity of this finding, but Fleming had been working for years searching for anything that would inhibit S aureus like that, illustrating Pasteur's statement that "chance favors the prepared mind." It has been said that science is like a mosaic, with each bit coming from an individual study. By looking at the pattern of how all the studies come together, one can see when the bulk of the evidence supports a particular hypothesis as opposed to another. I like this simile because it emphasizes the importance and interdependence of all studies, including those in the past, not unlike Newton's statement "If I have seen further than others, it is by standing upon the shoulders of giants." Occasionally there is a major paradigm shift, however, that suddenly allows a much larger change in the mosaic. It does not necessarily negate all the data previously collected but may change the interpretation of the whole pattern. For example, Howard Margolis,1.Margolis H It started with Copernicus. McGraw-Hill, New York2002Google Scholar a professor of the history of science at the University of Chicago, believes that the explorations of Columbus and others resulting in the publication of a New World map in 1507, which showed the New World on the back side of the earth, may have resulted in Copernicus, an astronomer who studied both medicine and law as a young man, being able to take data commonly available for centuries and draw radically new conclusions. In 1543, Copernicus published his book about the solar system, De Revolutionibus, in which he said that earth was not the center of the universe but merely a planet among planets, rotating around the sun. He began the book with an apology for presenting an idea that he knew would seem absurd. He ended the book by warning philosophers and theologians not to meddle in this lest they make fools of themselves. Margolis1.Margolis H It started with Copernicus. McGraw-Hill, New York2002Google Scholar says that the helicocentric hypothesis was an idea whose time had come, which turned the world of science inside out and seemed to catalyze rapid progress in science. He notes that there were major scientific accomplishments at the dawn of what some have called the scientific revolution at the beginning of the 17th century, the likes of which had not been seen in the previous 14 centuries. He also claims that all the very important discoveries were made by a small number of Copernicans, men like Galileo who embraced and were apparently inspired by what Copernicus had done. Margolis says that although Copernicans were still vastly outnumbered at this time, "they could see that the opposition was in retreat and making a last stand in a bastion that looked ridiculous to Copernicans." Some have expressed concern that scientists like Copernicus sometimes "go out on a limb" and advocate a scientific conclusion they know to be true before it is widely accepted by the scientific community, arguing that scientists should be dispassionate and that dispassionate scientists shouldn't care whether a scientific idea is accepted or not. In an article on "the social imperatives of medical research," however, Eisenberg2.Eisenberg L The social imperatives of medical research.Science. 1977; 198: 1105-1110Crossref PubMed Scopus (48) Google Scholar observed that "not to act is to act." Table 1 shows that the history of science has, in fact, been filled with scientists advocating scientific findings that they found to be true before the scientific community was comfortable with their conclusions. Moreover, history shows that other scientists vigorously opposed these new hypotheses. For example, when Paul Lauterbur, the 2003 Nobel laureate in medicine, first published an article on magnetic resonance imaging, he said he was advised by previous Nobel laureates that magnetic resonance imaging would never work. Most of the names listed in Table 1 are probably as well-known as the hypotheses the scientists advocated. A possible exception is Barry Marshall, a recently active scientist who joined the faculty at the University of Virginia a couple of decades ago. He was derided for years for believing something that most specialists in the area considered to be absurd, that a bacterial infection could cause peptic ulcers. I added him to the list because virtually all now recognize that he was right.Table 1Some scientists who have advocated a scientific conclusion they believed to be true before it was widely accepted by the scientific communityCopernicusEdward JennerPierre Charles Alexander LouisCharles DarwinLouis PasteurJohn SnowJoseph ListerIgnaz Philip SemmelweisFlorence NightingaleOliver Wendell HolmesBarry Marshall (H pylori and ulcers) Open table in a new tab One of the Copernican-like paradigm shifts in medical science involved Pierre Charles Alexander Louis, who has been credited as being a father of epidemiology for introducing what he referred to as la méthode numérique (ie, the numerical method), which was essentially the use of biostatistics for making clinical epidemiologic decisions in the 1820s. Using this method, Louis found that the time-honored practice of bloodletting, which was known to have been used for at least 24 centuries (since the time of Hippocrates), didn't work. His publication was met with controversy and dismay. It took decades for his work to be accepted as correct and the practice of bloodletting to be abandoned. Louis had many students from both Europe and America, including Oliver Wendell Holmes. Josef Skoda studied under Louis and then taught Semmelweis at the University of Vienna. Louis's numerical method is displayed in Semmelweis's3.Semmelweis I.F The etiology, the concept and the prophylaxis of childbed fever. Hartleben's Verlag-Expedition, Pest (CA)1861Google Scholar most famous study (Table 2), which also required decades for acceptance by the medical community. Full acceptance and implementation of la méthode numérique took quite a few decades.Table 2Maternal mortality rates Allgemeines Krankenhaus, Vienna3.Semmelweis I.F The etiology, the concept and the prophylaxis of childbed fever. Hartleben's Verlag-Expedition, Pest (CA)1861Google ScholarWard 1Ward 2184611.4%2.7%1847Calcium hypochlorite washings begun18481.3%1.3% Open table in a new tab Inferential statistical comparison of rates, a step beyond anything imagined in Louis's day, still hadn't caught on by the middle of the 20th century. For example, when streptomycin became available in the 1940s, it was tried as monotherapy for patients with tuberculous meningitis, which had previously been universally fatal. The first small open trial using streptomycin showed a case fatality rate of only 50%. This was viewed as miraculous, and it became an accepted therapy with no discussion about or calculation of statistical significance. This was related to me by Dr Thomas Hunter,4.Hunter TH. Personal Communication, Charlottesville, VA, April 15, 1982.Google Scholar the physician who discovered the synergy between streptomycin and penicillin for treating streptococcal endocarditis in the 1940s. The first volume of Infection Control was published in 1980. Seventy-five percent of its original articles did not include a statistical methods section and did not compare rates with inferential statistics. In 1990, Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology published 3.6-fold more articles, and a large majority of the original articles compared rates using inferential statistics. It is clear that the pace of acceptance of statistics in medical research increased rapidly during the 1980s, and not just in journals like Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, which are devoted to epidemiology. A Medline search of the terms nosocomial or cross infections identified 29,080 publications since 1966, a mean of 765 per year. Publications in the 3 journals with a special focus on this area, Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, American Journal of Infection Control, and the Journal of Hospital Infection, have accounted for 26% of all publications with these Medical Subject Headings terms during these years. The most recent 60 articles with these Medical Subject Headings terms were published in 46 different medical journals. Those who think they are keeping up by reading just 1 infection control journal should perhaps think again. The Medline search also found that 22 (0.076%) of the 29,080 publications using the terms nosocomial or cross infections since 1966 had also used the term randomized controlled trial (RCT). None of these 22 studies were published in the 3 journals with a special focus in this area. Medline listed 20 other articles that used the term randomized controlled trial but did not use the terms nosocomial or cross infections, however, accounting for 0.27% of all publications in these 3 journals. For comparison, 2571 articles that used the term randomized controlled trial were identified among 1,754,019 English-language medical articles from 2000 through 2003 (ie, accounting for 0.15%). RCTs are on average more expensive to undertake, so extramural funding would be helpful for conducting them. There has been political support for investigator-initiated grants dealing with infections, such as malaria or leishmaniasis, that occur predominantly or entirely in third world countries, but not for grants related to nosocomial infection (NI) in American hospitals. A counterexample has been the National Institutes of Health (NIH) support of a Mycosis Study Group for conducting a series of studies of therapy of various fungal infections, some of which were nosocomial. For this reason I wrote to the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases a decade ago, proposing the creation of a Nosocomial Infections Study Group that would have a budget and could distribute public funds for undertaking studies hard to manage without such funding. The reply was that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) gets all monies related to that problem area, even though at the time there was no mechanism for individual investigators to submit a grant for extramural funding. This means that funded RCTs for NIs have usually been smaller than might be optimal for statistical power considerations. It also means they have often involved funding by a corporation with a vested interest in the results and thereby may have been subject to the selection of investigators with a track record favorable to the company. The Medline search also found that none of 61 publications on the terms smallpox and vaccine during 2003 and none of 685 articles on severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) published between March and June 2003 appeared in the 3 journals with a special focus on health care–associated infections. Austin Bradford Hill5.Hill A.B A short textbook of medical statistics.11th ed. Hodder and Stoughton, London1984Google Scholar proposed criteria for judging whether or not an association is causal (see Table 3). One of these, reversibility with an experiment, could obviously involve an RCT. Hill did not say that an RCT was always necessary, but would be preferable in certain situations, such as when clinicians were likely to choose the active drug for their most severely affected patients and allow those with milder illnesses to get the placebo (ie, creating a selection bias).Table 3Criteria for causal inference5.Hill A.B A short textbook of medical statistics.11th ed. Hodder and Stoughton, London1984Google Scholar1. Strength of association2. Consistency of evidence3. Temporal relationship4. Biological gradient5. Reversibility with experiment6. Specificity7. Coherence of evidence8. Reasoning by analogy9. Plausibility Open table in a new tab It has recently been suggested that the results of observational studies cannot be trusted because of frequent error.6.Weinstein RA. Controlling VRE and MRSA: standard precautions vs. surveillance cultures and contact precautions. Infectious Diseases Society of America 40th Annual Meeting, Chicago (IL), October 24, 2002.Google Scholar If true, the field of health care epidemiology is in serious trouble because, as just demonstrated, these studies have constituted the vast majority of studies in this field, as they have in most of medicine. Three recent meta-analyses compared the results of many RCTs and observational studies examining the same questions and found that the results were generally in agreement both qualitatively and quantitatively.7.Concato J Shah N Horwitz R.I Randomized controlled trials, observational studies, and the hierarchy of research designs.N Engl J Med. 2000; 342: 1887-1892Crossref PubMed Scopus (2782) Google Scholar, 8.Benson K Hartz A.J A comparison of observational studies and randomized, controlled trials.N Engl J Med. 2000; 342: 1878-1886Crossref PubMed Scopus (1947) Google Scholar, 9.Phillips A.N Grabar S Tassie J.M Costagliola D Lundgren J.D Egger M Use of observational databases to evaluate the effectiveness of antiretroviral therapy for HIV infection: comparison of cohort studies with randomized trials. EuroSIDA, the French Hospital Database on HIV and the Swiss HIV Cohort Study Groups.AIDS. 1999; 13: 2075-2082Crossref PubMed Scopus (134) Google Scholar For example, Fig 1 offers a graph from one of these studies showing the point estimates of RCTs and observational studies for several different questions. The authors, a well-known and respected epidemiology group from Yale University, concluded that the results of observational studies did not systematically overestimate or underestimate the effects of an intervention. They also noted that there was sometimes greater variation among the results of RCTs. Some RCTs showed obviously wrong results, if the mean results of all RCTs of the question are taken as mostly likely reflecting truth. This makes it clear that a single study of either type cannot be considered definitive and that consistent results from different studies by different investigators in different populations are needed, as emphasized by Hill. Each of the 3 meta-analyses concluded that randomized trials are the design of choice but found that the data from observational studies of the same question usually yielded comparable results. One of the few areas within hospital epidemiology for which there have been multiple randomized trials has been the use of antiseptics for prevention of catheter-related infections. Use of chlorhexidine gluconate at the catheter site significantly decreased catheter colonization in 6 of 7 RCTs, as compared with use of povidone iodine or alcohol. Three of the 6 also found significant reductions in catheter-related bloodstream infection (BSI), whereas the other 3 had inadequate power to address this outcome. Multiple randomized trials have also been done regarding scheduled replacement of central venous catheters (CVC). After an RCT of this question was started at my hospital, my coinvestigators and I submitted a grant for NIH funding to make the study larger than would be possible otherwise. Because there was no NIH section on hospital-acquired infections, the grant was forwarded to an anesthesiology section. The response was that the topic was not of great interest and that the study probably wouldn't be decisive. After the New England Journal of Medicine published the study, which found that scheduled replacement of CVCs did not prevent infection and actually harmed patients,10.Cobb D.K High K.P Sawyer R.G Sable C.A Adams R.B Lindley D.A et al.A controlled trial of scheduled replacement of central venous and pulmonary-artery catheters.N Engl J Med. 1992; 327: 1062-1068Crossref PubMed Scopus (366) Google Scholar it was calculated that stopping the practice would net US hospitals approximately $500 million in collective savings per year simply by avoiding the costs of routine CVC replacement, without including excess costs because of complications engendered by routine CVC replacement. In 1996, CDC issued a new guideline regarding prevention of catheter infections and strongly recommended against scheduled replacement of CVCs, citing the University of Virginia study reporting that it did not work as category IA evidence.11.Pearson M.L Guideline for prevention of intravascular device-related infections. Hospital Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee.Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 1996; 17: 438-473Crossref PubMed Google Scholar None of the studies showing that this worldwide practice didn't work were conducted by the CDC or with extramural support from CDC, illustrating the difficulty in getting answers to important questions regarding NIs. A survey published in 1998 reported that 52% of surveyed intensive care units in Britain had continued using scheduled CVC replacement and that 59% of those using scheduled CVC replacement couldn't provide a reason for the practice.12.Cyna A.M Hovenden J.L Lehmann A Rajaseker K Kalia P Routine replacement of central venous catheters: telephone survey of intensive care units in mainland Britain.Br Med J. 1998; 316: 1944-1945Crossref PubMed Scopus (24) Google Scholar This reveals another unfortunate part of the state of the science. My hospital changed its policy 14 years ago, but a recent survey of house staff found that 10% were using scheduled CVC replacement again (unpublished data, Hall KK and Farr BM). Inertia is a powerful force in physics, and tradition is powerful in human systems. The authors of a recent IDSA/SHEA/SCCM guideline regarding management of catheter infections noted that almost none of the topics covered had been studied using RCTs.13.Mermel L.A Farr B.M Sherertz R.J Raad II, O'Grady N Harris J.S et al.Guidelines for the management of intravascular catheter-related infection.Clin Infect Dis. 2001; 32: 1249-1272Crossref PubMed Scopus (131) Google Scholar Likewise, a recent SHEA/IDSA/HICPAC/APIC guideline on hand hygiene strongly recommended alcohol handrubs for preventing NIs even though there had not yet been a single RCT of this question.14.Boyce J Pittet D HICPAC, SHEA, APIC, IDSA Hand Hygiene Task Force Guideline for hand hygiene in health-care settings. Recommendations of the Healthcare Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee and the HICPAC/SHEA/APIC/IDSA Hand Hygiene Task Force. Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America/Association for Professionals in Infection Control/Infectious Diseases of America.MMWR. 2002; 51: 1-45Google Scholar A recent meta-analysis of RCTs of nutritional supplements reported dramatic reductions in overall NIs, pneumonia, and bacteremia.15.Montejo J.C Zarazaga A Lopez-Martinez J Urrutia G Roque M Blesa A.L et al.Immunonutrition in the intensive care unit. A systemic review and consensus statement.Clin Nutr. 2003; 22: 221-233Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (242) Google Scholar This is notable because these studies have not generally been published in infection control journals. This suggests the need for careful scrutiny by health care epidemiologists and/or confirmatory studies. SARS is likely the biggest news story in infectious diseases epidemiology during the past year, with notable articles showing a significant association with a novel coronavirus,16.Peiris J.S Lai S.T Poon L.L Guan Y Yam L.Y Lim W et al.Coronavirus as a possible cause of severe acute respiratory syndrome.Lancet. 2003; 361: 1319-1325Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (2473) Google Scholar that 77% of SARS cases in a Toronto epidemic involved NI of health care workers,17.Booth C.M Matukas L.M Tomlinson G.A Rachlis A.R Rose D.B Dwosh H.A et al.Clinical features and short-term outcomes of 144 patients with SARS in the greater Toronto area.JAMA. 2003; 289: 2801-2809Crossref PubMed Scopus (1165) Google Scholar and that infection control measures worked when used, especially wearing masks or respirators.18.Seto W.H Tsang D Yung R.W Ching T.Y Ng T.K Ho M et al.Effectiveness of precautions against droplets and contact in prevention of nosocomial transmission of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).Lancet. 2003; 361: 1519-1520Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (713) Google Scholar A recent study in the Annals of Internal Medicine found that community-acquired BSI were now frequently health care–associated and that the mortality of such cases was similar to that of nosocomial BSI and higher than for other community-acquired BSI.19.Friedman N.D Kaye K.S Stout J.E McGarry S.A Trivette S.L Briggs J.P et al.Health care–associated bloodstream infections in adults: a reason to change the accepted definition of community-acquired infections.Ann Intern Med. 2002; : 791-797Crossref PubMed Scopus (1375) Google Scholar Four studies in the New England Journal of Medicine were included in the review. The first reported that nurse staffing in general and RN staffing in particular were inversely correlated with risk for multiple adverse outcomes, including infections and deaths from infections (pneumonia or sepsis).20.Needleman J Buerhaus P Mattke S Stewart M Zelevinsky K Nurse-staffing levels and the quality of care in hospitals.N Engl J Med. 2002; 346: 1715-1722Crossref PubMed Scopus (1729) Google Scholar The second article reported that a manufacturer's recall of a bronchoscope with a defective part linked to ineffective disinfection led to recognition of a sizable outbreak of Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections and possibly 3 deaths in 1 hospital.21.Srinivasan A Wolfenden L.L Song X Mackie K Hartsell T.L Jones H.D et al.An outbreak of Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections associated with flexible bronchoscopes.N Engl J Med. 2003; 348: 221-227Crossref PubMed Scopus (176) Google Scholar The hospital's outbreak stopped with the recall. The third article described 1 of the 2 vancomycin-resistant S aureus cases reported in the United States during 2002.22.Chang S Sievert D.M Hageman J.C Coulton M.L Tenover F.C Downes F.P et al.Infection with vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus containing the vanA resistance gene.N Engl J Med. 2003; 348: 1342-1347Crossref PubMed Scopus (949) Google Scholar Pulsed field gel electrophoresis showed the patient's vancomycin-resistant S aureus to be identical to the methicillin-resistant S aureus (MRSA) of the patient and her friend. Polymerase chain reaction revealed vanA, which on sequencing was identical to the vanA in the patient's Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus isolate and in transposon TN 1546. The minimal inhibitory concentration to vancomycin was 1,024 μg/mL, and the authors concluded that "this finding underscores the importance of extending efforts to prevent and reduce spread of MRSA." The fourth article reported the results of an RCT of prophylactic intranasal mupirocin to prevent postoperative S aureus infections.23.Perl T.M Cullen J.J Wenzel R.P Zimmerman M.B Pfaller M.A Sheppard D et al.Intranasal mupirocin to prevent post-operative Staphylococcus aureus.N Engl J Med. 2002; : 346Google Scholar It found no significant surgical-site infection (SSI) prevention, but power was only 75.6%; among S aureus carriers there was a strong trend toward SSI prevention, and overall postoperative S aureus infections were reduced significantly. Multiple prior RCTs of mupirocin prophylaxis have shown significant prevention of dialysis-related infections. There also have been multiple observational studies with both surgical and dialysis patients, suggesting significant prevention. Three studies in Clinical Infectious Diseases were included in the review. The first found that wearing gowns and gloves for care of VRE patients resulted in lower VRE rates than when gloves only were worn.24.Puzniak L.A Leet T Mayfield J Kollef M Mundy L.M To gown or not to gown: the effect on acquisition of vancomycin resistant enterococci.Clin Infect Dis. 2002; 35: 18-25Crossref PubMed Scopus (101) Google Scholar The second found that S aureus SSI were associated with a 2-fold higher risk of secondary BSI than occurred with all other etiologic agents.25.Petti C.A Sanders L.L Trivette S.L Briggs J.P Sexton D.J Postoperative bacteremia secondary to surgical site infection.Clin Infect Dis. 2002; 34: 305-308Crossref PubMed Scopus (36) Google Scholar The third study reported a significantly higher mortality rate for patients with MRSA infections with intermediate resistance to vancomycin (VISA), as compared with infections caused by MRSA fully susceptible to vancomycin.26.Fridkin S.K Hageman J.C McDougal L.K Mohammed J Jarvis W.R Perl T.M et al.Epidemiological and microbiological characterization of infections caused by Staphylococcus aureus with reduced susceptibility to vancomycin, United States, 1997-2001.Clin Infect Dis. 2003; 36: 429-439Crossref PubMed Scopus (303) Google Scholar This remained true in multivariate analysis after adjustment for other known predictors of hospital mortality. An article from the Archives of Internal Medicine found that multiresistant clones of Acinetobacter baumannii and P aeruginosa were spreading throughout the 15 hospitals in Brooklyn, including some "resistant to all standard antibiotics."27.Landman D Quale J.M Mayorga D Adedeji A Vangala K Ravishanka J et al.Citywide clonal outbreak of multiresistant Acinetobacter baumannii and Pseudomonas aeruginosa in Brooklyn, NY: the preantibiotic era has returned.Arch Intern Med. 2002; 162: 1515-1520Crossref PubMed Scopus (278) Google Scholar A single clone accounted for 62% of the A baumannii isolates and was found in all 15 hospitals. Carbapenem resistance was associated with cephalosporin use at each of the hospitals. Ribotyping showed that 3 clones accounted for nearly half the multiresistant P aeruginosa isolates found in most hospitals. The authors concluded that more aggressive control measures were needed. Six studies in the Journal of Hospital Infection were included in the review. The first reported that 2 clones of MRSA accounted for most bloodstream isolates of MRSA in 12 hospitals in 7 states stretching from New York to Georgia; 51% were clone A, 9% were closely related to clone A, and 20% were clone W.28.Da Silva Coimbra M.V Silva-Carvalho M.C Wisplinghoff H Hall G.O Tallent S Wallace S et al.Clonal spread of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in large a geographic area of the United States.J Hosp Infect. 2003; 53: 103-110Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (48) Google Scholar Clone A infected patients in all 12 hospitals, accounting for 17% to 78% of MRSA bacteremias in the different hospitals. Clone W caused infections in 10 of the 12 hospitals. The second study reported that a selective mannitol broth offered a "convenient, inexpensive, sensitive method for high throughput screening for MRSA."29.Gurran C Holliday M.G Perry J.D Ford M Morgan S Orr K.E A novel selective medium for the detection of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus result reporting in under 24 h.J Hosp Infect. 2002; 52: 148-151Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (28) Google Scholar A third study reported rates of invasive aspergillosis in Paris hospitals.30.Cornet M Fleury L Maslo C Bernard J.F Brucker G Invasive Aspergillosis Surveillance Network of the Assistance Publique-Hopitaux de Paris. Epidemiology of invasive aspergillosis in France: a six-year multicenter survey in the Greater Paris area.J Hosp Infect. 2002; 51: 288-296Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (156) Google Scholar There was no seasonal variation, and crude mortality was 63%. Incidence was 8% in patients with acute myelogenous leukemia, 6% with ALL, 13% after allogeneic stem cell transplant, 1% after autologous stem cell transplant, 11% after heart-lung transplant, and 0.4% after kidney transplant. The fourth study reported molecular typing of Aspergillus fumigatus isolates but reported inability to locate the environmental reservoir for patient infections despite finding many A fumigatus isolates from the environment.31.Symoens F Burnod J Lebeau B Viviani M.A Piens M.A Tortorano A.M et al.Hospital-acquired Aspergillus fumigatus infection: can molecular typing methods identify an environmental source?.J Hosp Infect. 2002; 52: 60-67Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (27) Google Scholar A fifth article examined risk and prognostic factors for candidemia.32.Tortora

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