Nicolas Troillet
University of Lausanne
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Annals of Surgery | 2011
Hugo Sax; Ilker Uckay; Carlo Balmelli; Enos Bernasconi; Karim Boubaker; Kathrin Mühlemann; Christian Ruef; Nicolas Troillet; Andreas F. Widmer; Giorgio Zanetti; Didier Pittet
OBJECTIVE To assess the overall burden of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) in patients exposed and nonexposed to surgery. BACKGROUND Targeted HAI surveillance is common in healthcare institutions, but may underestimate the overall burden of disease. METHODS Prevalence study among patients hospitalized in 50 acute care hospitals participating in the Swiss Nosocomial Infection Prevalence surveillance program. RESULTS Of 8273 patients, 3377 (40.8%) had recent surgery. Overall, HAI was present in 358 (10.6%) patients exposed to surgery, but only in 206 (4.2%) of 4896 nonexposed (P < 0.001). Prevalence of surgical site infection (SSI) was 5.4%. Healthcare-associated infections prevalence excluding SSI was 6.5% in patients with surgery and 4.7% in those without (P < 0.0001). Patients exposed to surgery carried less intrinsic risk factors for infection (age >60 years, 55.6% vs 63.0%; American Society of Anesthesiologists score >3,5.9% vs 9.3%; McCabe for rapidly fatal disease, 3.9% vs 6.6%; Charlson comorbidity index >2, 12.3% vs 20.9%, respectively; all P < 0.001) than those nonexposed, but more extrinsic risk factors (urinary catheters, 39.6%vs 14.1%; central venous catheters, 17.8% vs 7.1%; mechanical ventilation, 4.7% vs 1.3%; intensive care stay, 18.3% vs 8.8%, respectively; all P<0.001). Exposure to surgery independently predicted an increased risk of HAI (odds ratio 2.43; 95% CI 2.0–3.0). CONCLUSIONS Despite a lower intrinsic risk, patients exposed to surgery carried more than twice the overall HAI burden than those nonexposed; almost half was accountable to SSI. Extending infection control efforts beyond SSI prevention in these patients might be rewarding, especially because of the extrinsic nature of risk factors.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Gabriel Birgand; Didier Lepelletier; Gabriel Baron; Steve Barrett; A.-C. Breier; Cagri Buke; Ljiljana Markovic-Denic; Petra Gastmeier; Jan Kluytmans; Outi Lyytikäinen; Elizabeth Sheridan; Emese Szilágyi; Evelina Tacconelli; Nicolas Troillet; Philippe Ravaud; Jean-Christophe Lucet
Objective Although surgical-site infection (SSI) rates are advocated as a major evaluation criterion, the reproducibility of SSI diagnosis is unknown. We assessed agreement in diagnosing SSI among specialists involved in SSI surveillance in Europe. Methods Twelve case-vignettes based on suspected SSI were submitted to 100 infection-control physicians (ICPs) and 86 surgeons in 10 European countries. Each participant scored eight randomly-assigned case-vignettes on a secure online relational database. The intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) was used to assess agreement for SSI diagnosis on a 7-point Likert scale and the kappa coefficient to assess agreement for SSI depth on a three-point scale. Results Intra-specialty agreement for SSI diagnosis ranged across countries and specialties from 0.00 (95%CI, 0.00–0.35) to 0.65 (0.45–0.82). Inter-specialty agreement varied from 0.04 (0.00–0.62) in to 0.55 (0.37–0.74) in Germany. For all countries pooled, intra-specialty agreement was poor for surgeons (0.24, 0.14–0.42) and good for ICPs (0.41, 0.28–0.61). Reading SSI definitions improved agreement among ICPs (0.57) but not surgeons (0.09). Intra-specialty agreement for SSI depth ranged across countries and specialties from 0.05 (0.00–0.10) to 0.50 (0.45–0.55) and was not improved by reading SSI definition. Conclusion Among ICPs and surgeons evaluating case-vignettes of suspected SSI, considerable disagreement occurred regarding the diagnosis, with variations across specialties and countries.
Archives of Surgery | 2011
Martin Hübner; Michele Diana; Giorgio Zanetti; Marie-Christine Eisenring; Nicolas Demartines; Nicolas Troillet
World Journal of Surgery | 2011
Michele Diana; Martin Hübner; Marie-Christine Eisenring; Giorgio Zanetti; Nicolas Troillet; Nicolas Demartines
Lancet Infectious Diseases | 2017
Jakko van Ingen; Thomas A. Kohl; Katharina Kranzer; Barbara Hasse; Peter M. Keller; Anna Katarzyna Szafrańska; Doris Hillemann; Meera Chand; Peter W. Schreiber; Rami Sommerstein; Christoph Berger; Michele Genoni; Christian Rüegg; Nicolas Troillet; Andreas F. Widmer; Sören L. Becker; Tim Eckmanns; Sebastian Haller; Christiane Höller; Sylvia B. Debast; Maurice J Wolfhagen; Joost Hopman; Jan Kluytmans; Merel Langelaar; Daan W. Notermans; Jaap ten Oever; Peter van den Barselaar; Alexander B.A. Vonk; Margreet C. Vos; Nada Ahmed
International Journal for Quality in Health Care | 2007
Jean-Christophe Luthi; Nicolas Troillet; Marie-Christine Eisenring; Hugo Sax; Bernard Burnand; Hude Quan; William A. Ghali
Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control | 2013
Ilker Uckay; Hugo Sax; Angèle Gayet-Ageron; Christian Ruef; Kathrin Mühlemann; Nicolas Troillet; Christiane Petignat; Enos Bernasconi; Carlo Balmelli; Andreas F. Widmer; Karim Boubaker; Didier Pittet
Forum Médical Suisse | 2018
Manuel Pernet; Pierre-Yves Lovey; Philippe Abbet; Nicolas Troillet
Journal of Hospital Infection | 2017
Mohamed Abbas; E. Aghayev; N. Troillet; M.-C. Eisenring; Stefan P. Kuster; A. F. Widmer; S. Harbarth; Carlo Balmelli; Marie-Christine Eisenring; Stéphan Juergen Harbarth; Jonas Marschall; Virginie Masserey Spicher; Didier Pittet; Christian Ruef; Hugo Sax; Matthias Schlegel; Alexander Schweiger; Nicolas Troillet; Andreas F. Widmer; Giorgio Zanetti
Forum Médical Suisse | 2017
Laurence Senn; Rami Sommerstein; Nicolas Troillet