Abstract:Objective To evaluate the medical resource consumption due to healthcare-associated infection (HAI) in patients with tumor based on disease diagnosis-related grouping (DRG). Methods Medical records of discharged patients from a tumor center of a hospital in 2022 were analyzed retrospectively, and differences in indicators such as average length of hospital stay and average expenses per hospitalization between the HAI group and the non-HAI group were compared. Results A total of 10 674 cases were included in the analysis, and 217 cases (2.03%) were in the HAI group. The average expense per hospitalization (5.10[2.38, 8.43] 10 000 Yuan vs 1.16[0.74, 2.04] 10 000 Yuan) and average length of hospital stay (25 [13, 40] days vs 6 [4, 11] days) of patients in the HAI group were both higher than those in the non-HAI group, both with statistically significant differences (both P<0.05). The most common infection was bloodstream infection and pulmonary infection, accounting for 23.96% and 22.58%, respectively. In the three DRG groups, namely, RC19 (radiotherapy for malignant proliferative diseases), RU12 (supportive treatment for malignant proliferative diseases [length of hospital stay 7-29 days]), and RB19 (high-dose chemotherapy and/or other treatments for acute leukemia), patients in the HAI group had higher average expenses per hospitalization and average length of hospital stay than patients in the non-HAI group, diffe-rences were all statistically significant (all P<0.05). Conclusion DRG assessment can effectively identify key po-pulations for HAI prevention and control, contribute to implement precise infection prevention and control strategies, and reduce HAI incidence and related medical resource consumption.