TY - JOUR
T1 - Guideline adherence and survival of patients with candidaemia in Europe
T2 - results from the ECMM Candida III multinational European observational cohort study
AU - ECMM Candida III Study Group
AU - Hoenigl, Martin
AU - Salmanton-García, Jon
AU - Egger, Matthias
AU - Gangneux, Jean-Pierre
AU - Bicanic, Tihana
AU - Arikan-Akdagli, Sevtap
AU - Alastruey-Izquierdo, Ana
AU - Klimko, Nikolai
AU - Barac, Aleksandra
AU - Özenci, Volkan
AU - Meijer, Eelco F. J.
AU - Khanna, Nina
AU - Bassetti, Matteo
AU - Rautemaa-Richardson, Riina
AU - Lagrou, Katrien
AU - Adam, Kai-Manuel
AU - Akalin, Emin Halis
AU - Akova, Murat
AU - Arsic Arsenijevic, Valentina
AU - Aujayeb, Avinash
AU - Blennow, Ola
AU - Bretagne, Stéphane
AU - Danion, François
AU - Denis, Blandine
AU - de Jonge, Nick Alexander
AU - Desoubeaux, Guillaume
AU - Drgona, Lubos
AU - Erben, Nurettin
AU - Gori, Andrea
AU - García Rodríguez, Julio
AU - Garcia-Vidal, Carolina
AU - Giacobbe, Daniele Roberto
AU - Goodman, Anna L.
AU - Hamal, Petr
AU - Hammarström, Helena
AU - Toscano, Cristina
AU - Lanternier, Fanny
AU - Lass-Flörl, Cornelia
AU - Lockhart, Deborah E. A.
AU - Longval, Thomas
AU - Loughlin, Laura
AU - Matos, Tadeja
AU - Mikulska, Malgorzata
AU - Narayanan, Manjusha
AU - Martín-Pérez, Sonia
AU - Prattes, Juergen
AU - Rogers, Benedict
AU - Rahimli, Laman
AU - Ruiz, Maite
AU - Roilides, Emmanuel
N1 - Funding Information: The study was partly funded by an Investigator Initiated Research Grant from Scynexis (principal investigators MH and OAC), and the remainder was not funded. Publisher Copyright: © 2023 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2023/6
Y1 - 2023/6
N2 - Background: The European Confederation of Medical Mycology (ECMM) collected data on epidemiology, risk factors, treatment, and outcomes of patients with culture-proven candidaemia across Europe to assess how adherence to guideline recommendations is associated with outcomes. Methods: In this observational cohort study, 64 participating hospitals located in 20 European countries, with the number of eligible hospitals per country determined by population size, included the first ten consecutive adults with culture-proven candidaemia after July 1, 2018, and entered data into the ECMM Candida Registry (FungiScope CandiReg). We assessed ECMM Quality of Clinical Candidaemia Management (EQUAL Candida) scores reflecting adherence to recommendations of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases and the Infectious Diseases Society of America guidelines. Findings: 632 patients with candidaemia were included from 64 institutions. Overall 90-day mortality was 43% (265/617), and increasing age, intensive care unit admission, point increases in the Charlson comorbidity index score, and Candida tropicalis as causative pathogen were independent baseline predictors of mortality in Cox regression analysis. EQUAL Candida score remained an independent predictor of mortality in the multivariable Cox regression analyses after adjusting for the baseline predictors, even after restricting the analysis to patients who survived for more than 7 days after diagnosis (adjusted hazard ratio 1·08 [95% CI 1·04–1·11; p<0·0001] in patients with a central venous catheter and 1·09 [1·05–1·13; p<0·0001] in those without one, per one score point decrease). Median duration of hospital stay was 15 days (IQR 4–30) after diagnosis of candidaemia and was extended specifically for completion of parenteral therapy in 100 (16%) of 621 patients. Initial echinocandin treatment was associated with lower overall mortality and longer duration of hospital stay among survivors than treatment with other antifungals. Interpretation: Although overall mortality in patients with candidaemia was high, our study indicates that adherence to clinical guideline recommendations, reflected by higher EQUAL Candida scores, might increase survival. New antifungals, with similar activity as current echinocandins but with longer half-lives or oral bioavailability, are needed to reduce duration of hospital stay. Funding: Scynexis.
AB - Background: The European Confederation of Medical Mycology (ECMM) collected data on epidemiology, risk factors, treatment, and outcomes of patients with culture-proven candidaemia across Europe to assess how adherence to guideline recommendations is associated with outcomes. Methods: In this observational cohort study, 64 participating hospitals located in 20 European countries, with the number of eligible hospitals per country determined by population size, included the first ten consecutive adults with culture-proven candidaemia after July 1, 2018, and entered data into the ECMM Candida Registry (FungiScope CandiReg). We assessed ECMM Quality of Clinical Candidaemia Management (EQUAL Candida) scores reflecting adherence to recommendations of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases and the Infectious Diseases Society of America guidelines. Findings: 632 patients with candidaemia were included from 64 institutions. Overall 90-day mortality was 43% (265/617), and increasing age, intensive care unit admission, point increases in the Charlson comorbidity index score, and Candida tropicalis as causative pathogen were independent baseline predictors of mortality in Cox regression analysis. EQUAL Candida score remained an independent predictor of mortality in the multivariable Cox regression analyses after adjusting for the baseline predictors, even after restricting the analysis to patients who survived for more than 7 days after diagnosis (adjusted hazard ratio 1·08 [95% CI 1·04–1·11; p<0·0001] in patients with a central venous catheter and 1·09 [1·05–1·13; p<0·0001] in those without one, per one score point decrease). Median duration of hospital stay was 15 days (IQR 4–30) after diagnosis of candidaemia and was extended specifically for completion of parenteral therapy in 100 (16%) of 621 patients. Initial echinocandin treatment was associated with lower overall mortality and longer duration of hospital stay among survivors than treatment with other antifungals. Interpretation: Although overall mortality in patients with candidaemia was high, our study indicates that adherence to clinical guideline recommendations, reflected by higher EQUAL Candida scores, might increase survival. New antifungals, with similar activity as current echinocandins but with longer half-lives or oral bioavailability, are needed to reduce duration of hospital stay. Funding: Scynexis.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85149651043&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(22)00872-6
DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(22)00872-6
M3 - Article
C2 - 37254300
SN - 1473-3099
VL - 23
SP - 751
EP - 761
JO - The Lancet Infectious Diseases
JF - The Lancet Infectious Diseases
IS - 6
ER -