| Literature DB >> 30685808 |
Jinhua Ren1, Qiaoxian Lin1,2, Weimin Chen3, Congmeng Lin4, Yuxin Zhang1, Cunrong Chen5, Shaozhen Chen1, Xiaohong Yuan1, Ping Chen1, Xiaofeng Luo1, Yun Lin3, Lvying Shen4, Mengxian Guo4, Qiuru Chen1, Min Xiao1, Yongquan Chen1, Xueqiong Wu1, Yanling Zeng1,6, Zhizhe Chen1, Xudong Ma4, Jianda Hu1, Ting Yang7.
Abstract
A multicenter retrospective study in 131 patients (44 females/87 males) with hematological disorders who underwent G-CSF-primed/haplo-identical (Haplo-ID) (n = 76) or HLA-identical (HLA-ID) HSCT (n = 55) from February 2013 to February 2016 was conducted to compare the incidence and risk factors for pre-engraftment bloodstream infection (PE-BSI). In the Haplo-ID group, 71/76 patients with high-risk (n = 28) or relapsed/refractory hematological malignancies (n = 43) received FA5-BUCY conditioning (NCT02328950). All received trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) prophylaxis. Blood cultures and catheter tip cultures were obtained to confirm the BSI. PE-BSI was detected in 24/131 HSCT patients (18/76 in Haplo-ID and 6/55 in HLA-ID) after 28 febrile neutropenic episodes. Among 28 isolates for the 24 patients, 21 (75%) were Gneg bacteria, 6 (21.4%) Gpos and 1 (3.6%) fungi. Bacteria sources were central venous line infection (7/29.2%), gastroenteritis (6/25%), lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI; 5/20.8%), perianal skin infection (4/16.7%), and unknown (2/8.3%). The duration of neutropenia (P = 0.046) and previous Gneg bacteremia (P = 0.037) were important risk factors by univariate analysis, while the type of HSCT was not. A trend of TMP-SMX-resistant BSI in both groups may be due to routine antibacterial prophylaxis strategies. Our data show that G-CSF-primed Haplo-ID HSCT did not increase the risk of PE-BSI, even with intensive immunosuppressive treatments.Entities:
Keywords: Bloodstream infection; HSCT; Haplo-identical; Immunosuppressive and myelosuppressive treatments; Pre-engraftment
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30685808 DOI: 10.1007/s10096-019-03482-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis ISSN: 0934-9723 Impact factor: 3.267