| Literature DB >> 30901044 |
Eric A Biondi1,2, Brian Lee3, Shawn L Ralston4, Jared M Winikor2, Justin F Lynn2, Angela Dixon5, Russell McCulloh3,6.
Abstract
Importance: Febrile neonates (persons in the first month of life) are believed to be at higher risk for bacteremia or bacterial meningitis than infants in their second month of life. However, the true prevalence is unclear. Objective: To determine modern rates of bacteremia and bacterial meningitis in febrile neonates and infants in the second month of life presenting to an ambulatory setting. Data Sources: A comprehensive, no-limit search was conducted in PubMed using previously published search terms in February 2015 and repeated in September 2016. Study Selection: Abstracts and full texts were reviewed independently by several investigators. Studies were included if data regarding blood cultures or cerebrospinal fluid cultures from consecutive febrile infants in an ambulatory setting could be extrapolated within the age groups. To limit the analysis to the period after the availability of the Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccination, studies that collected data before 1990 were excluded. Data Extraction and Synthesis: Data were extracted in accordance with the Meta-analyses of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (MOOSE) reporting guidelines via independent abstraction by several investigators. The Newcastle-Ottawa Scale was used to assess bias. Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcomes were prevalence rates of bacteremia and bacterial meningitis in febrile neonates and infants in the second month of life. In neonates, prevalence rates were also estimated in the era of group B Streptococcus intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis (after 1996).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30901044 PMCID: PMC6583289 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.0874
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Netw Open ISSN: 2574-3805
Figure 1. Flowchart of Eligible Studies
Description of Included Studies
| Study | Date | Design | Setting | Symptoms of Population | Data on Prevalence (% of Patients) | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bacteremia-only studies | ||||||
| Chiu et al,[ | 1992-1993 | P, C | ED (Taiwan) | Temperature ≥38.0°C; previously healthy | 0-31 d: All 254 had blood culture, 13 B (5) | 9 |
| Bonsu et al,[ | 1992-1999 | R, C | ED | Rectal temperature ≥38.0°C in ED or home | Study (n = 3961), 151 excluded for missing data, 1353 aged >56 d; 0-28 d: all 950 had blood culture, 14 B (2); 29-56 d: all 1507 had blood culture, 17 B (1) | 7 |
| Chiu et al,[ | 1994-1995 | P, C | ED (Taiwan) | Temperature ≥38.0°C; previously healthy | 0-28 d: All 250 had blood culture, 11 B (4) | 9 |
| Garcia et al,[ | 2003-2010 | R, C | ED (Spain) | Rectal temperature ≥38.0°C in ED or home | 0-28 d: 207 of 307 had blood culture, 8 B (4) | 8 |
| No obvious source of fever | ||||||
| No respiratory symptoms | ||||||
| No diarrhea | ||||||
| Meningitis-only studies | ||||||
| None | ||||||
| Bacteremia and meningitis studies | ||||||
| Ferrera et al,[ | 1990-1994 | R, C | ED | Temperature ≥38.0°C in ED or home | 0-28 d: (n = 188), 167 (89) had blood culture and 148 (79) had CSF culture, 6 B (4), 4 M (3); B/M concurrence not reported | 8 |
| No obvious infectious source | ||||||
| Bonadio et al,[ | 1991-2000 | P, C | ED | Rectal temperature ≥38.0°C in ED or home | 28-56 d: All 534 had blood culture and CSF culture, 7 B (1), 4 M (1); no concurrent B/M | 9 |
| Bachur and Harper,[ | 1993-1999 | R, C | ED | Rectal temperature ≥38.0°C | 0-30 d: (n = 1298), 1215 (94) had blood culture and 1147 (88) had CSF culture, 26 B (2), 10 M (1); B/M concurrence not reported. 31-60 d: (n = 2104), 1866 (89) had blood culture and 1717 (82) had CSF culture, 19 B (1), 4 M (0); B/M concurrence not reported | 8 |
| Baker and Bell,[ | 1994-1996 | P, C | ED | Rectal temperature ≥38.0°C | 3-28 d: All 254 had blood culture and CSF culture, 8 B (3), 4 M (2); 3 concurrent B/M | 8 |
| Herr et al,[ | 1999-2000 | R, C | ED | Temperature ≥38.0°C | 0-28 d: (n = 179), 13 excluded for missing data, all remaining 166 had blood culture and CSF culture, 1B (1), 2 M (1); no concurrent B/M; 29-60 d: (n = 285), 17 excluded for missing data, all remaining 268 had blood culture and CSF culture, 6 B (2), 0 M (0) | 8 |
| Caviness et al,[ | 2001-2005 | R, C | ED | Rectal temperature ≥38.0°C in ED | 0-28 d: (n = 960), 893 (93) had blood culture and 874 (91) had CSF culture, 30 B (3), 13 M (1) | 6 |
| Zarkesh et al,[ | 2004-2009 | R, C | ED (Iran) | Temperature ≥38.5°C in ED | 0-28 d: (n = 253), 51 excluded for incomplete records, all remaining 202 had blood culture and CSF culture, 8 B (4), 1 M (0); 1 concurrent B/M | 8 |
| No prior admission | ||||||
| Full term | ||||||
| No chronic disease | ||||||
| No recent antibiotics | ||||||
| Ashkenazi-Hoffnung et al,[ | 2005-2009 | P, C | Pediatric department (Israel, unclear if ED or clinic) | Rectal temperature ≥38.0°C | Study (n = 1584) of febrile infants aged ≤90 d, but only those aged 0-28 d were consecutive; 0-28 d: all 510 had blood culture and CSF culture, 12 B (2), 0 M (0) | 9 |
| No chronic disease | ||||||
| Born >34 wk | ||||||
| No recent antibiotics |
Abbreviations: B, bacteremia; C, consecutively enrolled patients; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; ED, emergency department; M, meningitis; P, prospective; R, retrospective.
Percentages are rounded to nearest integer.
Newcastle-Ottawa Scale bias scores range from 1 (worst) to 9 (best).
Unclear whether this status needed to be during evaluation or if it could have been at home as well.
Unable to use CSF culture data owing to inability to identify the total number of CSF cultures obtained or owing to potential selection bias (eg, CSF culture obtained only if clinical suspicion for meningitis).
Additional unpublished data obtained via correspondence with original authors.
There were 724 infants presenting in the ED; 43 incomplete records were excluded; of the remaining 681 infants, 188 had fever without an obvious source, 21 had undocumented blood culture, and 40 had undocumented CSF culture.
There may have been 12 of 874 (1%); unclear owing to rounding in the fluid cultures of the original study.
Figure 2. Meta-analysis of Prevalence of Bacteremia and Meningitis in Febrile Neonates and Infants in the First and Second Months of Life
For each subgroup, the sum of the statistics, along with the summary prevalence, is represented by the middle of the solid diamonds. The width of the diamonds represents summary 95% CIs; squares represent mean values, with error bars representing 95% CIs.
Figure 3. Meta-analysis of Prevalence of Bacteremia and Meningitis in Febrile Neonates in the First Month of Life
For each subgroup, the sum of the statistics, along with the summary prevalence, is represented by the middle of the solid diamonds. The width of the diamonds represents summary 95% CIs; squares represent mean values, with error bars representing 95% CIs.
Figure 4. Meta-analysis of Prevalence of Bacteremia and Meningitis in Febrile Infants in the Second Month of Life
For each subgroup, the sum of the statistics, along with the summary prevalence, is represented by the middle of the solid diamonds. The width of the diamonds represents summary 95% CIs; squares represent mean values, with error bars representing 95% CIs.