| Literature DB >> 25425653 |
Ying Dong1, Christian P Speer2.
Abstract
The incidence of neonatal late-onset sepsis (LOS) is inversely related to the degree of maturity and varies geographically from 0.61% to 14.2% among hospitalised newborns. Epidemiological data on very low birth weight infants shows that the predominant pathogens of neonatal LOS are coagulase-negative staphylococci, followed by Gram-negative bacilli and fungi. Due to the difficulties in a prompt diagnosis of LOS and LOS-associated high risk of mortality and long-term neurodevelopmental sequelae, empirical antibiotic treatment is initiated on suspicion of LOS. However, empirical therapy is often inappropriately used with unnecessary broad-spectrum antibiotics and a prolonged duration of treatment. The increasing number of multidrug-resistant Gram-negative micro-organisms in neonatal intensive care units (NICU) worldwide is a serious concern, which requires thorough and efficient surveillance strategies and appropriate treatment regimens. Immunological strategies for preventing neonatal LOS are not supported by current evidence, and approaches, such as a strict hygiene protocol and the minimisation of invasive procedures in NICUs represent the cornerstone to reduce the burden of neonatal LOS. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.Entities:
Keywords: Infectious Diseases; Microbiology; Neonatology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25425653 PMCID: PMC4413803 DOI: 10.1136/archdischild-2014-306213
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed ISSN: 1359-2998 Impact factor: 5.747
Recent epidemiological data on the incidence of neonatal late-onset sepsis (LOS)
| Author and country | No. of centres | Birth year of cohort | No. of neonates | Definition of the onset of LOS | LOS, No. (%) | Proportion (%) of CONS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VLBW infants | ||||||
| Boghossian | 6 | 2002–2008 | 15 178 | 72 h | 3797 (25.0) | 53.2 |
| Lahra | 1 | 1992–2004 | 798 | 48 h | 220 (27.6) | 64.4 |
| Tröger | 46 | 2003–2011 | 5886 | 72 h | 882 (15.0) | 58.4 |
| All admitted neonates | ||||||
| Vergnano | 12 | 2006–2008 | 14 225 | 48 h | 868 (6.1) | 54 |
| van den Hoogen | 1 | 2003–2006 | 2278 | 48 h | 318 (13.9) | 77.9 |
| Shim | 1 | 1996–2005 | 1479 | 96 h | 134 (9.1) | 6.2 |
| Morioka | 5 | 2006–2008 | 6894 | 72 h | 42 (0.61) | 11.9 |
| Al-Taiar | 4 | 2006–2009 | 36 842 | 72 h | 782 (2.12) | 42.2 |
| Tsai | 1 | 2004–2011 | 5010 | 6 days | 713 (14.2) | 39.9 |
| Hammoud | 1 | 2005–2009 | 12 987 | 6 days | 949 (7.3) | 35.5 |
| Leal | 1 | 2004–2007 | 11 790 | 72 h | 78 (0.66) | 47.4 |
CONS, coagulase-negative staphylococci; VLBW, very low birth weight.
Incidence of LOS by birth weight
| Reference | Birth weight (g) | No. of neonates | LOS, No. (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Boghossian | 400–500 | 223 | 146 (65.5) |
| 501–750 | 2680 | 1372 (51.2) | |
| 751–1000 | 4030 | 1309 (32.5) | |
| Vergnano | 1000–1499 | 1110 | 113 (10.2) |
| 1500–2500 | 2945 | 66 (2.2) | |
| >2500 | 5340 | 88 (1.6) |
LOS, late-onset sepsis.
Figure 1Major causative pathogens of neonatal late-onset sepsis and their incidence by geographical areas.
Theoretical mechanisms of currently explored feeding strategies to prevent neonatal LOS
| Explored strategy | Theoretical mechanisms |
|---|---|
| Probiotics | ↑ the intestinal mucosal barrier to prevent the translocation of bacteria |
| Competitive exclusion of potential pathogens | |
| Produce bacteriocins that kill pathogens | |
| ↑ immunoglobulin A mucosal responses | |
| Modulation of host immune reactions to microbial products | |
| ↑ enteral nutrition and gut maturation | |
| Early enteral trophic feeding | Prevent the atrophy of gastrointestinal mucosa |
| ↑ the establishment of healthy gut microflora | |
| ↓ the use of parenteral nutrition by facilitating full enteral feeding | |
| ↑ gut mucosal immunity | |
| Lactoferrin | Antimicrobial effect by iron chelation |
| Immunomodulatory function through cytokine production | |
| ↑ the growth of probiotic bacteria | |
| ↑ the growth and differentiation of enterocytes | |
| ↓ the formation of reactive oxygen species |
LOS, late-onset sepsis.
Trials for prevention of late-onset sepsis in very low birth weight neonates
| Trial of example | Birth year of cohort | Therapy | No. of infants | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention | Control | Outcome | Results (intervention vs control) | |||
| Immune replacement therapy | ||||||
| Carr | 2000–2006 | GM-CSF | 139 | 141 | Sepsis-free survival rate | 66.9% vs 74.5%, difference: −8%, 95% CI −18 to 3 |
| Kuhn | 2002–2006 | G-CSF | 102 | 98 | Sepsis-free survival rate | 73% vs 67%, p=0.42 |
| Fanaroff | 1988–1991 | IVIG | 1204 | 1212 | Incidence of sepsis | 15.5% vs 17.2%, RR: 0.9, 95% CI 0.75 to 1.08 |
| DeJonge | 2004–2006 | INH-A21 | 994 | 989 | Incidence of sepsis | 27% vs 29%, p=0.2 |
| Feeding strategies | ||||||
| Jacobs | 2007–2011 | Probiotics* | 548 | 551 | Incidence of sepsis | 13.1% vs 16.2%, p=0.16 |
| Flidel-Rimon | 1995–2001 | Enteral feeding | 385† | The relationship between the initiation of feeding and sepsis | Enteral feeding was started at an earlier age in infants who did not develop sepsis (2.8 vs 4.8 days, p=0.0001) | |
| Manzoni | 2007–2008 | BLF alone | 153 | 168 | Incidence of sepsis | 5.9% vs 17.3%, p=0.002 |
| BLF plus LGG | 151 | 168 | Incidence of sepsis | 4.6% vs 17.3%, p<0.001 | ||
| Skin care with antiseptics | ||||||
| Quach | 2009–2013 | CHG bathing | 195‡ | Incidence of sepsis | Sepsis rate decreased in the period of CHG bathing (6.00 vs 1.92/1000 CVC-days; adjusted RR, 0.33, 95% CI 0.15 to 0.73) | |
*Bifidobacterium infantis, Streptococcus thermophilus and Bifidobacterium lactis.
†Grouping of neonates was based on the presence of sepsis.
‡The study used a before-and-after quasiexperimental design.
BLF, bovine lactoferrin; CHG, chlorhexidine gluconate; CVC, central venous catheter; GM-CSF, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; IVIG, intravenous immunoglobulins; LGG, Lactobacillus rhamnosus; G-CSF, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor; RR, relative risk.