Hyperbilirubinemia: a risk factor for infection in the surgical intensive care unit
Abstract
Background
Hyperbilirubinemia in intensive care unit (ICU) patients is common. We hypothesized that hyperbilirubinemia in the surgical ICU predisposes patients to infection.
Methods
Patients with bilirubin ≤3 mg/dL were compared to patients with bilirubin >3 mg/dL. We then compared the low bilirubin patients to high bilirubin patients who developed infection after their hyperbilirubinemia.
Results
There were 1,620 infections in 5,712 patients with low bilirubin (28%), compared with 284 in 409 patients in the high bilirubin group (69%, P < .001). After removing the patients in whom hyperbilirubinemia developed after infection, we found infection in 156 of 281 remaining patients (56%, P < .001). This group had a 3-fold increased risk of infection compared with low bilirubin (odds ratio [OR] 3.17, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.48–4.03, P < .001).
Conclusions
There is an increased susceptibility to infection among jaundiced surgical ICU (SICU) patients that persists even when sepsis-related hyperbilirubinemia patients are excluded.
Keywords: Jaundice, Hyperbilirubinemia, Bilirubin, Infection, Critical illness
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PII: S0002-9610(07)00979-8
doi:10.1016/j.amjsurg.2007.12.010
© 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
