| Literature DB >> 28526094 |
Johan Courjon1,2, Elisa Demonchy3, Nicolas Degand4, Karine Risso3, Raymond Ruimy5,4,6, Pierre-Marie Roger3,5.
Abstract
Bacteremia of unknown origin (BUO) are associated with increased mortality compared to those with identified sources. Microbiological data of those patients could help to characterize an appropriate empirical antibiotic treatment before bloodcultures results are available during sepsis of unknown origin. Based on the dashboard of our ward that prospectively records several parameters from each hospitalization, we report 101 community-acquired BUO selected among 1989 bacteremic patients from July 2005 to April 2016, BUO being defined by the absence of clinical and paraclinical infectious focus and no other microbiological samples retrieving the bacteria isolated from blood cultures. The in-hospital mortality rate was 9%. We retrospectively tested two antibiotic associations: amoxicillin-clavulanic acid + gentamicin (AMC/GM) and 3rd generation cephalosporin + gentamicin (3GC/GM) considered as active if the causative bacteria was susceptible to at least one of the two drugs. The mean age was 71 years with 67% of male, 31 (31%) were immunocompromised and 52 (51%) had severe sepsis. Eleven patients had polymicrobial infections. The leading bacterial species involved were Escherichia coli 25/115 (22%), group D Streptococci 12/115 (10%), viridans Streptococci 12/115 (10%) and Staphylococcus aureus 11/115 (9%). AMC/GM displayed a higher rate of effectiveness compared to 3GC/GM: 100/101 (99%) vs 94/101 (93%) (p = 0.04): one Enterococcus faecium strain impaired the first association, Bacteroides spp. and Enterococcus spp. the second. In case of community-acquired sepsis of unknown origin, AMC + GM should be considered.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial resistance; Bacteremia; Bacteremia of unknown origin; Empirical antibiotic treatment; Primary bacteremia; Severe sepsis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28526094 PMCID: PMC5438554 DOI: 10.1186/s12941-017-0214-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Clin Microbiol Antimicrob ISSN: 1476-0711 Impact factor: 3.944
Fig. 1Selection of the patients with a bacteremia of unknown origin (BUO)
Characteristics of the 101 patients with BUO
| Clinical characteristics of patients | Values (%) |
|---|---|
| Age, years mean (SD) | 71 (17) |
| Sex, men (%) | 68 (67) |
| Comorbidities | |
| Cardiovascular | 61 (60) |
| Immunosuppressed | 31 (31) |
| Pulmonary | 27 (27) |
| Diabetes mellitus | 17 (17) |
| Dyslipidemia | 14 (14) |
| Neurological | 14 (14) |
| Medical device | 17 (17) |
| Severe sepsis | 52 (51) |
| Death | 9 (9) |
| ICU transfer | 12 (12) |
| Symptoms at admission | |
| Fever | 99 (98) |
| Isolated fever | 22 (22) |
| Dyspnea | 14 (14) |
| Fatigue | 13 (13) |
| Diarrhea/vomiting | 13 (13) |
| Confusion | 13 (13) |
| Loss of consciousness | 11 (11) |
| Back pain | 8 (8) |
| Arthralgia/myalgia | 6 (6) |
| Fall | 6 (6) |
| Chest pain | 4 |
| Abdominal pain | 3 |
| Neurological deficit | 2 |
| Jaundice | 1 |
| Cough | 1 |
| Headache | 1 |
Risk factors for unfavourable outcome (death or ICU transfer) during in-hospital care
| Variables | Unfavourable outcome n = 17 (17) | Favourable outcome n = 84 (83) | p | OR [95% CI] |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years (mean) | 70 | 74 | 0.335 | |
| Sex (male) | 9 (53) | 59 (70) | 0.165 | |
| Comorbidities | ||||
| Cardiovascular | 11 (65) | 50 (60) | 0.690 | |
| Immunosuppressed | 3 (18) | 28 (33) | 0.232 | |
| Pulmonary | 6 (35) | 21 (25) | 0.381 | |
| Diabetes mellitus | 3 (18) | 14 (16) | 0.921 | |
| Dyslipidemia | 4 (23) | 10 (12) | 0.205 | |
| Neurological | 3 (18) | 11 (13) | 0.620 | |
| Medical device | 5 (30) | 13 (15) | 0.170 | |
| Symptoms at admission | ||||
| Dyspnea | 2 (12) | 11 (13) | 0.881 | |
| Diarrhea/vomiting | 5 (30) | 7 (8) | 0.014 | 2.47 [1.62–26.78] |
| Confusion | 2 (12) | 11 (13) | 0.881 | |
| Loss of consciousness | 4 (23) | 8 (9) | 0.103 | |
| Bacteria | ||||
| | 6 (35) | 37 (44) | 0.505 | |
| | 5 (29) | 6 (7) | 0.007 | 2.64 [1.42–22.17] |
| | 5 (29) | 33 (39) | 0.443 | |
| Polymicrobial | 2 (12) | 9 (11) | 0.899 | |
Univariate and multivariate analysis
Bacteria isolated and associated resistance to amoxicillin-clavulanic acid, gentamicin and 3rd generation cephalosporin
| Bacteria | n | Natural resistance | n | Acquired resistance | n |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| | 25 | High-level penicillinase (AMC-R) | 3 | ||
| | 9 | Inhibitor-resistant TEM (AMC-R) | 2 | ||
| | 5 | ampC chromosomal inducible cephalosporinase (AMC-Ra) | 5 | Cephalosporinase hyperproduction (AMC-R and 3GC-Rb) | 3 |
| | 3 | ESBL (AMC-R and 3GC-R) | 1 | ||
| Others | 5 | ||||
| Non- | |||||
| | 2 | ampC chromosomal Inducible and low permeability (AMC-R and 3GC-R) | 2 | ||
| Others | 3 | ||||
|
| |||||
| Group D | 12 | ||||
| Viridans | 12 | ||||
| | 4 | ||||
| | 3 | ||||
| | 3 | ||||
| | 2 | ||||
| Group C | 2 | ||||
|
| |||||
| | 3 | PBP5 (3GC-R) | 4 | ||
| | 1 | High-level PBP5 (AMC-R) | 1 | ||
|
| 11 | PBP2A (AMC-R and 3GC-R) | 1 | ||
| APH 2′′-AAC 6′ (GM-Rc) | 2 | ||||
| Other Gram-positive | |||||
| | 1 | ||||
| | 2 | PBP3 (3GC-R) | 2 | ||
| Anaerobes | Lack of drug uptake (GM-R) | 7 | |||
| | 4 | Class A β-lactamase (3GC-R) | 4 | ||
| | 1 | ||||
| | 1 | ||||
| | 1 | ||||
aMechanism resulting in resistance to amoxicillin–clavulanic acid
bMechanism resulting in resistance to ceftriaxone
cMechanism resulting in resistance to gentamicin