Frequency of antimicrobial-resistant bloodstream infections in 111 hospitals in Thailand, 2022
Krittiya Tuamsuwan, Panida Chamawan, Phairam Boonyarit, Voranadda Srisuphan, Preeyarach Klaytong, Chalida Rangsiwutisak, Prapass Wannapinij, Trithep Fongthong, John Stelling, Paul Turner, Direk Limmathurotsakul

TL;DR
This study analyzed antimicrobial-resistant bloodstream infections in 111 Thai hospitals in 2022 to identify patterns and factors affecting their frequency.
Contribution
The study provides region- and hospital-level insights into AMR BSI frequency in Thailand using a national surveillance system.
Findings
Community-origin AMR BSI was most commonly caused by third-generation cephalosporin-resistant Escherichia coli.
Hospital-origin AMR BSI was most commonly caused by carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii.
Underuse of blood culture testing was linked to higher AMR BSI frequency per tested patients.
Abstract
To evaluate the frequency of antimicrobial-resistant bloodstream infections (AMR BSI) in Thailand. We analyzed data from 2022, generated by 111 public hospitals in health regions 1 to 12, using the AutoMated tool for Antimicrobial resistance Surveillance System (AMASS), and submitted to the Ministry of Public Health, Thailand. Multilevel Poisson regression models were used. The most common cause of community-origin AMR BSI was third-generation cephalosporin-resistant Escherichia coli (3GCREC, 65.6%; 5101/7773 patients) and of hospital-origin AMR BSI was carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (CRAB, 51.2%, 4968/9747 patients). The percentage of patients tested for BSI was negatively associated with the frequency of community-origin 3GCREC BSI and hospital-origin CRAB BSI (per 100,000 tested patients). Hospitals in health regions 4 (lower central region) had the highest frequency…
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TopicsSocial Sciences and Policies
