P-59. Clinical predictors of ICU admission in patients with invasive Pneumococcal blood stream infection: a review of 10-year single-center experience
Ayesha Samreen, Rita Igwilo-Alaneme, Nischal Ranganath, Omar M Abu Saleh

TL;DR
This study identifies clinical predictors of ICU admission in patients with pneumococcal blood infections, highlighting smoking, substance use, and metastatic complications as significant factors.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into specific risk factors for ICU admission in invasive pneumococcal disease, emphasizing modifiable and non-modifiable predictors.
Findings
Smoking, recent substance use, and metastatic complications were significantly associated with ICU admission.
Up-to-date pneumococcal vaccination showed a trend toward a protective effect against severe disease.
Serogroups 22 and 15 were most frequently identified among isolates with available serotype data.
Abstract
Despite advancements in vaccination, mortality from Pneumococcal blood stream infections remains high (∼20%). Risk factors include host comorbidities (e.g., immunosuppression, kidney disease, alcohol use, smoking) and certain serotypes. While intensive care unit (ICU) admission and septic shock are associated with poor outcomes, predictors of severe disease remain underexplored. Characteristics of patients with ICU admission within 24 hours of invasive pneumococcal disease diagnosisEpidemiology, clinical characteristics, metastatic complications and management of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) Characteristics of patients with ICU admission within 24 hours of invasive pneumococcal disease diagnosis Epidemiology, clinical characteristics, metastatic complications and management of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) We conducted a retrospective review of hospitalized adults with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPneumonia and Respiratory Infections · Streptococcal Infections and Treatments · Nosocomial Infections in ICU
