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©The Author(s) 2024.
World J Diabetes. Aug 15, 2024; 15(8): 1683-1691
Published online Aug 15, 2024. doi: 10.4239/wjd.v15.i8.1683
Published online Aug 15, 2024. doi: 10.4239/wjd.v15.i8.1683
Type of HAIs | Primary disease | Results | Research type | Country | Ref. |
NUTIs | - | The overall incidence of NUTIs in the diabetic group was significantly higher than in the non-diabetic group (13.67% vs 6.40%; P = 0.004) | Cross-sectional study | Pakistan | Ramrakhia et al[19] |
Undergoing surgery for colorectal cancer | DM with chronic complications is an independent risk factor of NUTIs | Retrospective study | United States | Kang et al[20] | |
- | No significant association between DM and NUTIs | Retrospective study | France | Girard et al[21] | |
- | DM was an independent risk factor for CAUTIs in elderly hospitalized patients | Case-control study | China | Shen et al[22] | |
HCAPs | - | A high mortality rate from HAPs was strongly correlated with DM | Prospective study | Egypt | Yakoub et al[30] |
- | The incidence of all types of pneumonia analyzed was significantly higher in patients with T2DM than in patients with non-T2DM | Retrospective study | Spain | Lopez-de-Andres et al[31] | |
Acute cerebral infarction | HCAPs occurred in 80% of all patients with DM, which was significantly higher than that in non-DM patients (72.2%) | Retrospective study | China | Liu et al[32] | |
Acute cerebral infarction | DM is not a risk factor for non-VAPs | Retrospective study | China | Yang et al[33] | |
- | DM is not a risk factor for the development of HAPs or an increased mortality factor for HAP-related hospital complications | Meta-analysis | - | Vardakas et al[34] | |
- | MDR bacteria-induced VAPs were not associated with DM | Meta-analysis | - | Hu et al[35] | |
- | VAPs after cardiac surgery were not associated with DM | Meta-analysis | - | He et al[36] | |
SSIs | ACLR | DM may increase the risk of SSIs after ACLR | Meta-analysis | - | Zhao et al[40] |
HNC tumor resection | The risk of SSIs is more than 3 times higher in diabetic patients than in people without DM | Retrospective study | China | Gan et al[41] | |
- | DM was an independent risk factor for SSIs for multiple surgical procedure types, and this association was highest for cardiac surgery compared with other types of surgeries | Meta-analysis | - | Martin et al[42] | |
Noncardiac surgery | Glucose control in the first 24 hours after surgery was poor and the mean serum glucose concentrations of ≥ 150 mg/dL during this time were associated with increased rates of postoperative infectious complications | Meta-analysis | America | King et al[43] | |
NBSIs | - | A significant increase was noted in NBSIs and mortality in patients with DM, but DM was not an independent risk factor for NBSIs | Prospective observational study | Greece | Tsakiridou et al[37] |
- | Diabetic patients showed a 1.7-fold probability of developing ICU-acquired NBSIs compared to nondiabetic subjects | Prospective observational study | Greece | Michalia et al[48] | |
- | CRBSIs in diabetic patients were 4.32 times higher than in non-diabetic patients | Prospective study | China | Jia et al[49] | |
- | COVID-19 patients with DM were at higher risk of developing NBSIs | Descriptive cross-sectional study | India | Samantaray et al[50] | |
- | DM was a predictor of shorter survival in patients with sepsis or septic shock | Prospective study | Germany | Schmidt et al[51] |
- Citation: Yu XL, Zhou LY, Huang X, Li XY, Pan QQ, Wang MK, Yang JS. Urgent call for attention to diabetes-associated hospital infections. World J Diabetes 2024; 15(8): 1683-1691
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1948-9358/full/v15/i8/1683.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4239/wjd.v15.i8.1683