The incidence and mortality of IFI were lower than expected in this strictly sequential cohort representative of the routine care in the NILG network. The efficacy and safety of caspofungin were similar to other prophylactic regimens.
Purpose To identify a cohort of subjects without treatment for any cardiovascular risk and analyze the potential causative role of treatment for depression on the development of major cardiovascular outcomes during 2 years of follow-up. Methods We carried out a record-linkage analysis of hospital discharge records, prescription databases and vital statistics for all consecutive patients aged 30 years or older in one Italian region during a 4-year period. Depression was defined in terms of exposure to at least three prescriptions of antidepressant drugs within 1 year. Patients had no history of treatment with cardiovascular or antidiabetic agents and had not been hospitalized with a diagnosis of any cardiovascular condition in the preceding year. Followup was extended up to 2 years or to time to occurrence of major outcomes defined as either all-cause mortality, hospitalization for any cardiovascular cause or chronic exposure to cardiovascular drugs (antihypertensive, statins, antidiabetics). The results are expressed hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) within age categories (30-49, 50-59, ≥60 years). Results A total of 105,573 persons without treated cardiovascular risk at baseline were identified, among whom 1,129(1.1%) had been chronically exposed to antidepressant treatment. Treated depression determined an increased risk of all cause-mortality (HR 1.88, 95% CI 1.33-2.66, p<0.001) and of subsequent treatment with antidiabetic agents (HR 0.89, 95% CI 1.34-2.66, p<0.001), statins (HR 1.87, 95% CI 1.53-2.29, p<0.001) and antihypertensive drugs (HR 1.25, 95% CI 1.07-1.47, p=0.006). Conclusion Among the general population without treated cardiovascular risk, pharmacologic treatment for depression was associated with an increase in all-cause mortality and major cardiovascular outcomes.
This scoping review aims to check the existing international literature related to the placement and management of central venous catheters (CVCs) in adults and compare them with the Good Practices published by the Italian Society of anesthesiology intensive care (hereafter “SIAARTI Good Practices”) and the protocols written by the Italian Expert group on long-term central venous accesses (hereafter “GAVeCeLT Protocols”) and verify the existence of experiences focused on the daily assessment of the implantation site and on educational interventions on awake patients or caregivers to enhance their empowerment. A systematic search approach has been applied. Our composite research question has been primarily defined by the PICO: only patients over 18 years of age with CVC for any clinical reason except for kidney replacement therapy; placement and management of CVCs with procedures recommended by the recent international guidelines/bundles and specific educational interventions are the interventions to be compared with standard CVC placement and management without any educational interventions. In total, two different types of outcomes have been taken into consideration: catheter-related complications rate (A) and patient/caregiver involvement (B). Eligible articles have been limited to Systematic Review OR Meta-analysis OR Guidelines in Human field, focusing on adults, English language only, from January 2015 to December 2020. Searched Medical Subject Headings (MeSHs) Terms were “venous” AND “catheters,” and the correspondence with the designed PICO framework was then checked directly by the authors. A comprehensive search was conducted by two reviewers on 15 February 2021 in four databases, and 32 full-text articles were finally included and qualitatively assessed. The included articles appear to be in line with the indications provided by the available Italian Good Practices and explain the complexity of this procedure. The need to promote the use of bundles and checklists related to CVC placement and dressing procedures comes to light. These organizational technologies can be implemented following the creation of teams dedicated to venous access that are subjected to continuous training. As regards the impact of educational initiatives, implementing paths of health education and proper hospital discharge preparation for both healthcare workers and families increases safety for the patient with CVC.
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