Literature DB >> 10949983

Candidemia in pediatric surgery patients.

E M Mokaddas1, S A Ramadan, S H Abo el Maaty, S C Sanyal.   

Abstract

Candida spp. are the fourth leading cause of bloodstream infection. While the literature on neonatal candidemia is abundant, its prevalence in pediatric surgery cases is hardly mentioned. This study was carried out over a 5-year period to evaluate the prevalence of candidemia in pediatric surgery intensive care unit patients (ICU), and to examine both the neonatal and hospital risk factors for developing candidemia in comparison to control groups of patients with either no infection or with bacteremia, type and outcome of therapy. A total of 1,359 pediatric surgery patients admitted to the ICU and high dependency unit (HDU) were included in the study. Using relevant specimens from them, a microbiological survey was carried out on admission and weekly thereafter. Twenty-five patients developed candidemia during the study period. Twenty-one of them were admitted to ICU. Nine were low birth weight and immature neonates. All 25 patients had underlying disease, most involving the gastroentestinal tract and requiring surgical intervention. All patients had been given broad-spectrum beta-lactam antibiotics with or without aminoglycosides and an anti-anaerobic drug prior to candidemia. The data show that patients who were not infected had very few risk factors that could predispose to candidemia. The bacteremic group of patients had more risk factors: mainly ICU stay, prior antibiotic therapy or GI surgery. The candidemia patients outnumbered these two groups in both neonatal and hospital risk factors. Twenty-three candidemia patients had received amphotericin B and 2 had fluconazole. Seventeen of them improved and the rest expired during therapy. Fourteen of the Candida isolated were C. albicans while the rest belonged to other Candida spp. dominated by C. parapsilosis. In conclusion, candidemia was infrequent in pediatric surgery patients. ICU stay, GI surgery and prior broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy were important risk factors.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10949983     DOI: 10.1179/joc.2000.12.4.332

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Chemother        ISSN: 1120-009X            Impact factor:   1.714


  6 in total

1.  Molecular Analysis of Resistance and Detection of Non-Wild-Type Strains Using Etest Epidemiological Cutoff Values for Amphotericin B and Echinocandins for Bloodstream Candida Infections from a Tertiary Hospital in Qatar.

Authors:  Saad J Taj-Aldeen; Husam Salah; Winder B Perez; Muna Almaslamani; Mary Motyl; Atqah AbdulWahab; Kelley R Healey; David S Perlin
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2018-08-27       Impact factor: 5.191

2.  Epidemiology of candidemia in Qatar, the Middle East: performance of MALDI-TOF MS for the identification of Candida species, species distribution, outcome, and susceptibility pattern.

Authors:  S J Taj-Aldeen; A Kolecka; R Boesten; A Alolaqi; M Almaslamani; P Chandra; J F Meis; T Boekhout
Journal:  Infection       Date:  2013-12-19       Impact factor: 3.553

3.  Non-albicans Candida is the most common cause of candidemia in pediatric cancer patients.

Authors:  C A Mullen; H Abd El-Baki; H Samir; J J Tarrand; K V Rolston
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2003-03-11       Impact factor: 3.603

Review 4.  Invasive candidiasis in pediatric intensive care patients: epidemiology, risk factors, management, and outcome.

Authors:  Joanna Filioti; Kleomenis Spiroglou; Emmanuel Roilides
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2007-05-15       Impact factor: 17.440

5.  Changing trends in epidemiology and antifungal susceptibility patterns of six bloodstream Candida species isolates over a 12-year period in Kuwait.

Authors:  Ziauddin Khan; Suhail Ahmad; Noura Al-Sweih; Eiman Mokaddas; Khalifa Al-Banwan; Wadha Alfouzan; Inaam Al-Obaid; Khaled Al-Obaid; Mohammad Asadzadeh; Ahlam Jeragh; Leena Joseph; Soumya Varghese; Sandhya Vayalil; Omar Al-Musallam
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-05-01       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 6.  Invasive Candida Infections in Neonates after Major Surgery: Current Evidence and New Directions.

Authors:  Domenico Umberto De Rose; Alessandra Santisi; Maria Paola Ronchetti; Ludovica Martini; Lisa Serafini; Pasqua Betta; Marzia Maino; Francesco Cavigioli; Ilaria Cocchi; Lorenza Pugni; Elvira Bonanno; Chryssoula Tzialla; Mario Giuffrè; Jenny Bua; Benedetta Della Torre; Giovanna Nardella; Danila Mazzeo; Paolo Manzoni; Andrea Dotta; Pietro Bagolan; Cinzia Auriti
Journal:  Pathogens       Date:  2021-03-09
  6 in total

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