| Literature DB >> 20156360 |
Pascal Augustin1, Nathalie Kermarrec, Claudette Muller-Serieys, Sigismond Lasocki, Denis Chosidow, Jean-Pierre Marmuse, Nadia Valin, Jean-Marie Desmonts, Philippe Montravers.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The main objective was to determine risk factors for presence of multidrug resistant bacteria (MDR) in postoperative peritonitis (PP) and optimal empirical antibiotic therapy (EA) among options proposed by Infectious Disease Society of America and the Surgical Infection Society guidelines.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20156360 PMCID: PMC2875535 DOI: 10.1186/cc8877
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Demographic characteristics at initial surgery S0, and interval antibiotic therapy in the 100 patients with PP.
| Variable | Patients with MDR bacteria (n = 41) | Patients with other bacteria (n = 59) |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (year), mean ± SD | 63 ± 17 | 60 ± 16 | 0.37 |
| Gender, male, n (%) | 24 (59) | 32 (54) | 0.83 |
| Severity of underlying disease | |||
| Fatal (within 5 years), n (%) | 16 (39) | 21 (36) | 0.92 |
| Malignancy, n (%) | 17 (41) | 22 (37) | 0.86 |
| Diabetes mellitus, n (%) | 7 (17) | 11 (19) | 0.91 |
| Steroids or immunosuppressive therapy, n (%) | 15 (37) | 27 (46) | 0.36 |
| Initial surgery | |||
| In emergency, n (%) | 20 (49) | 15 (25) | 0.01 |
| Contaminated or infected wound class, n (%) | 25 (61) | 19 (32) | 0.016 |
| Prior hospitalization (within 3 months prior S0), n (%) | 24 (59) | 29 (49) | 0.24 |
| Prior antibiotic therapy (within 3 months, prior S0), n (%) | 18 (44) | 13 (22) | 0.02 |
| Interval antibiotics, n (%) | 33 (80) | 35 (59) | 0.026 |
| Broad-spectrum interval antibiotics, n (%) | 25 (61) | 11 (19) | 0.0001 |
MDR, multidrug resistant; PP, postoperative peritonitis; SD, standard deviation; S0, initial abdominal surgery.
Characteristics and clinical findings at reoperation in the 100 patients with PP
| Variable | Patients with MDR | Patients with other bacteria (n = 59) |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| APACHE II, mean ± SD | 21 ± 7 | 21 ± 7 | 0.90 |
| SOFA, mean ± SD | 7 ± 4 | 7 ± 4 | 0.63 |
| ≥ 1 organ failures, n (%) | 32 (78) | 48 (81) | 0.68 |
| Vasopressor support, n (%) | 26 (63) | 41 (69) | 0.38 |
| Time to reoperation (days), mean ± SD | 13 ± 16 | 10 ± 11 | 0.55 |
| Mechanisms of PP | |||
| Anastomotic leakage, n (%) | 14 (34) | 20 (34) | 0.98 |
| Perforation, n (%) | 9 (22) | 21 (36) | 0.14 |
| Miscellaneous, n (%) | 8 (20) | 10 (17) | 0.98 |
| Unknown cause, n (%) | 10 (24) | 8 (14) | 0.27 |
| Source of PP | |||
| Lower intestinal tract, n (%) | 16 (39) | 32 (54) | 0.67 |
APACHE, acute physiology and chronic health evaluation; MDR, multidrug resistant; PP, postoperative peritonitis; SD, standard deviation; SOFA, Sequential Organ Failure Assessment.
Bacteria isolated from peritoneal fluid in 100 episodes of postoperative peritonitis
| Microorganisms | Number of strains | Monomicrobial |
|---|---|---|
| Enterococci | 50 (19) | |
| | 11 (4) | |
| Other | 39 (14) | 1 |
| Streptococci | 30 (11) | |
| Staphylococci | 28 (10) | |
| | 7 (3) | |
| Coagulase-negative staphylococci | 21 (8) | 3 |
| Enterobacteriaceae | 101 (37) | |
| | 49 (18) | 4 |
| | 22 (8) | 1 |
| | 13 (5) | |
| | 7 (3) | 1 |
| | 5 (2) | |
| | 5 (2) | |
| | 16 (6) | 1 |
| | 2 (1) | |
| | 20 (7) | |
| Total bacteria | 269 (100) | 12 |
Numbers and percentages of bacteria responsible for PP according to the use of broad-spectrum IA
| Microorganisms | Patients without broad-spectrum IA | Patients with broad-spectrum IA |
|---|---|---|
| | 9 (5) | 16 (19) * |
| | 3 (2) | 5 (6) |
| | 1 (1) | 1 (1) |
| Enterococci, n(%) | 4 (2) | 3 (3) |
| Methicillin-resistant | 4 (2) | 3 (3) |
| Methicillin-resistant CNS, n(%) | 3 (2) | 13 (15) * |
| | 69 (37) | 11 (13) * |
| | 2 (1) | 6 (7) |
| Enterococci, n(%) | 31 (17) | 12 (14) |
| Streptococci, n(%) | 27 (15) | 5 (6) |
| Staphylococci, n(%) | 5 (3) | 0 |
| Other pathogens, n(%) | 26 (14) | 10 (12) |
CNS, coagulase negative staphylococci; IA, interval antibiotic therapy; PP, postoperative peritonitis; * P < 0.05 vs group without broad-spectrum IA.
Figure 1Adequacy rates of 17 theoretical antibiotic regimens according to the presence or absence of multidrug resistant bacteria. cip, ciprofloxacin; met, metronidazole; pip/taz, piperacillin/tazobactam; PP, postoperative peritonitis.
Figure 2Adequacy rates of 17 theoretical antibiotic regimens according to the presence or absence of broad-spectrum IA. cip, ciprofloxacin; met, metronidazole; IA, interval antibiotics; pip/taz, piperacillin/tazobactam.