posted on 2025-05-09, 10:09authored byMassimo Sartelli, Fausto Catena, Ari Leppaniemi, Walter Biffl, Zsolt BaloghZsolt Balogh, Cino BendinelliCino Bendinelli, Sanjay Gupta, Yoram Kluger, Ferdinando Agresta, Salomone Di Saverio, Gregorio Tugnoli, Elio Jovine, Luca Ansaloni, Carlos A. Ordonez, James F. Whelan, Gustavo P. Fraga, Carlos Augusto Gomes, Gerson Alves Pereira Junior, Kuo-Ching Yuan, Miklosh Bala, Miroslav P. Peev, Offir Ben-Ishay, Yunfeng Cui, Federico Coccolini, Sanjay Marwah, Sanoop Zachariah, Imtiaz Wani, Muthukumaran Rangarajan, Boris Sakakushev, Victor Kong, Adamu Ahmed, Ashraf Abbas, Ricardo Alessandro Teixeira Gonsaga, Gianluca Guercioni, Davide Corbella, Nereo Vettoretto, Elia Poiasina, Rafael Díaz-Nieto, Damien Massalou, Matej Skrovina, Ihor Gerych, Goran Augustin, Jakub Kenig, Vladimir Khokha, Cristian Tranà, Ernest E. Moore, Kenneth Yuh Yen Kok, Alain Chichom Mefire, Jae Gil Lee, Suk-Kyung Hong, Helmut Alfredo Segovia Lohse, Wagih Ghnnam, Alfredo Verni, Varut Lohsiriwat, Boonying Siribumrungwong, Tamer El Zalabany, Mark Malangoni, Alberto Tavares, Gianluca Baiocchi, Koray Das, Julien Jarry, Maurice Zida, Norio Sato, Kiyoshi Murata, Tomohisa Shoko, Takayuki Irahara, Ahmed O. Hamedelneel, George Velmahos, Noel Naidoo, Abdul Rashid Kayode Adesunkanmi, Yoshiro Kobe, Waturu Ishii, Kazuyuki Oka, Yoshitmitsu Izawa, Hytham Hamid, Iqbal Khan, A. K. Attri, Rajeev Sharma, Raul Coimbra, Juan Sanjuan, Marisol Badiel, Rita Barnabé, Kaoru Koike
The CIAOW study (Complicated intra-abdominal infections worldwide observational study) is a multicenter observational study underwent in 68 medical institutions worldwide during a six-month study period (October 2012-March 2013). The study included patients older than 18 years undergoing surgery or interventional drainage to address complicated intra-abdominal infections (IAIs). 1898 patients with a mean age of 51.6 years (range 18-99) were enrolled in the study. 777 patients (41%) were women and 1,121 (59%) were men. Among these patients, 1,645 (86.7%) were affected by community-acquired IAIs while the remaining 253 (13.3%) suffered from healthcare-associated infections. Intraperitoneal specimens were collected from 1,190 (62.7%) of the enrolled patients. 827 patients (43.6%) were affected by generalized peritonitis while 1071 (56.4%) suffered from localized peritonitis or abscesses. The overall mortality rate was 10.5% (199/1898). According to stepwise multivariate analysis (PR = 0.005 and PE = 0.001), several criteria were found to be independent variables predictive of mortality, including patient age (OR = 1.1; 95%CI = 1.0-1.1; p < 0.0001), the presence of small bowel perforation (OR = 2.8; 95%CI = 1.5-5.3; p < 0.0001), a delayed initial intervention (a delay exceeding 24 hours) (OR = 1.8; 95%CI = 1.5-3.7; p < 0.0001), ICU admission (OR = 5.9; 95%CI = 3.6-9.5; p < 0.0001) and patient immunosuppression (OR = 3.8; 95%CI = 2.1-6.7; p < 0.0001).