IntroductionHealthcare-associated infection is a common problem in patients from neonatal intensive care units and it is one of the leading causes of death in this group of patients. Healthcare-associated infections are associated with increases in mortality, morbidity, and prolonged length of hospital stay. The aim of the study was to assess the incidence, clinical presentation, mortality and aetiology of healthcare-associated infections in newborns in a neonatal intensive care unit between 2005 and 2010.Material and methodsThe research involved documentation of 2610 neonates hospitalized in this period in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, Dr Jan Biziel University Hospital No. 2 in Bydgoszcz. The incidence, clinical presentation, mortality and causative factors of healthcare-associated infections were assessed.ResultsThe prevalence of healthcare-associated infections was 7.32%. The most frequent healthcare-associated infections were bloodstream infection (65.4%) and urinary tract infection (22.5%). The mortality rate was 2.1%. The most frequent pathogens were coagulase-negative staphylococci (36.1%) and Klebsiella pneumoniae (29.3%).ConclusionsThe rate of healthcare-associated bloodstream infections in the analysed department is low, taking into consideration the specificity of the department. There is a necessity to establish convenient definitions of various kinds of healthcare-associated infecions in neonates, especially those born preterm.
Total 5% VOD frequency is similar to other reports. Infants and children receiving abdominal irradiation seem to be at special risk of VOD development.
Angiosarcoma in children - still uncontrollable oncological problem. The report of the Polish Paediatric Rare Tumours StudyAngiosarcoma is a rare, highly malignant vascular neoplasm with little data available on its clinical course and management in children. Ten children with angiosarcoma (M/F: 6/4; aged 2, 3-16 years) registered in Polish Paediatric Rare Tumours and Soft Tissue Sarcomas Studies between 1992 and 2006. Primary tumour exceeded 5 cm in seven patients and affected mainly deep tissues (heart-2, head/neck, bladder, brain, liver and upper limb - one patient each). Four patients had regional and two metastatic diseases (lungs and bones). Three patients were initially misdiagnosed as haemangioma. Complete primary excision was unfeasible even in local stages. All patients received supplementing chemotherapy with no response in four. Radiotherapy was given to five children, including three after relapse. Three of five secondary tumour resections proved complete. Seven patients experienced relapses (mainly metastatic) and two continuous progression. Relapsed patients received chemotherapy +/- radiotherapy and surgery (three). Nine patients died of disease (overall survival 6-66 months), and one child after mutilating secondary resection is alive. Angiosarcoma in children is highly aggressive with an extremely poor prognosis. Complete primary excision is unfeasible, even in seemingly local stages. The response to chemotherapy is poor and the large number of metastatic recurrences suggests a need for systemic therapy modifications.
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