Literature DB >> 34037963

Antimicrobial Lessons From a Large Observational Cohort on Intra-abdominal Infections in Intensive Care Units.

Dirk Vogelaers1,2, Stijn Blot3, Andries Van den Berge1, Philippe Montravers4.   

Abstract

Severe intra-abdominal infection commonly requires intensive care. Mortality is high and is mainly determined by disease-specific characteristics, i.e. setting of infection onset, anatomical barrier disruption, and severity of disease expression. Recent observations revealed that antimicrobial resistance appears equally common in community-acquired and late-onset hospital-acquired infection. This challenges basic principles in anti-infective therapy guidelines, including the paradigm that pathogens involved in community-acquired infection are covered by standard empiric antimicrobial regimens, and second, the concept of nosocomial acquisition as the main driver for resistance involvement. In this study, we report on resistance profiles of Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Enterococcus faecalis and Enterococcus faecium in distinct European geographic regions based on an observational cohort study on intra-abdominal infections in intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Resistance against aminopenicillins, fluoroquinolones, and third-generation cephalosporins in E. coli, K. pneumoniae and P. aeruginosa is problematic, as is carbapenem-resistance in the latter pathogen. For E. coli and K. pneumoniae, resistance is mainly an issue in Central Europe, Eastern and South-East Europe, and Southern Europe, while resistance in P. aeruginosa is additionally problematic in Western Europe. Vancomycin-resistance in E. faecalis is of lesser concern but requires vigilance in E. faecium in Central and Eastern and South-East Europe. In the subcohort of patients with secondary peritonitis presenting with either sepsis or septic shock, the appropriateness of empiric antimicrobial therapy was not associated with mortality. In contrast, failure of source control was strongly associated with mortality. The relevance of these new insights for future recommendations regarding empiric antimicrobial therapy in intra-abdominal infections is discussed.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 34037963     DOI: 10.1007/s40265-021-01534-w

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Drugs        ISSN: 0012-6667            Impact factor:   9.546


  42 in total

1.  Increasing burden of Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Enterococcus faecium in hospital-acquired bloodstream infections (2000-2014): A national dynamic cohort study.

Authors:  Koen Blot; Naïma Hammami; Stijn Blot; Dirk Vogelaers; Marie-Laurence Lambert
Journal:  Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol       Date:  2019-04-23       Impact factor: 3.254

2.  Risk factors for mortality and cost implications of complicated intra-abdominal infections in critically ill patients.

Authors:  Gennaro De Pascale; Simone Carelli; Maria Sole Vallecoccia; Salvatore Lucio Cutuli; Temistocle Taccheri; Luca Montini; Giuseppe Bello; Teresa Spanu; Mario Tumbarello; Americo Cicchetti; Irene Urbina; Marco Oradei; Marco Marchetti; Massimo Antonelli
Journal:  J Crit Care       Date:  2018-12-12       Impact factor: 3.425

Review 3.  Critical issues in the clinical management of complicated intra-abdominal infections.

Authors:  Stijn Blot; Jan J De Waele
Journal:  Drugs       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 9.546

4.  Mortality for intra-abdominal infection is associated with intrinsic risk factors rather than the source of infection.

Authors:  Tazo Inui; Manjunath Haridas; Jeffrey A Claridge; Mark A Malangoni
Journal:  Surgery       Date:  2009-10       Impact factor: 3.982

5.  Prevalence, predictors, and consequences of inappropriate empiric antimicrobial therapy for complicated urinary tract and intra-abdominal infections in Winnipeg hospitals.

Authors:  Christiaan H Righolt; Philippe Lagace-Wiens; Salaheddin M Mahmud
Journal:  Diagn Microbiol Infect Dis       Date:  2019-08-30       Impact factor: 2.803

6.  Essentials for selecting antimicrobial therapy for intra-abdominal infections.

Authors:  Stijn Blot; Jan J De Waele; Dirk Vogelaers
Journal:  Drugs       Date:  2012-04-16       Impact factor: 9.546

7.  Patients with faecal peritonitis admitted to European intensive care units: an epidemiological survey of the GenOSept cohort.

Authors:  Ascanio Tridente; Geraldine M Clarke; A Walden; S McKechnie; P Hutton; G H Mills; A C Gordon; P A H Holloway; J-D Chiche; J Bion; F Stuber; C Garrard; C J Hinds
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2013-12-04       Impact factor: 17.440

Review 8.  Antimicrobials: a global alliance for optimizing their rational use in intra-abdominal infections (AGORA).

Authors:  Massimo Sartelli; Dieter G Weber; Etienne Ruppé; Matteo Bassetti; Brian J Wright; Luca Ansaloni; Fausto Catena; Federico Coccolini; Fikri M Abu-Zidan; Raul Coimbra; Ernest E Moore; Frederick A Moore; Ronald V Maier; Jan J De Waele; Andrew W Kirkpatrick; Ewen A Griffiths; Christian Eckmann; Adrian J Brink; John E Mazuski; Addison K May; Rob G Sawyer; Dominik Mertz; Philippe Montravers; Anand Kumar; Jason A Roberts; Jean-Louis Vincent; Richard R Watkins; Warren Lowman; Brad Spellberg; Iain J Abbott; Abdulrashid Kayode Adesunkanmi; Sara Al-Dahir; Majdi N Al-Hasan; Ferdinando Agresta; Asma A Althani; Shamshul Ansari; Rashid Ansumana; Goran Augustin; Miklosh Bala; Zsolt J Balogh; Oussama Baraket; Aneel Bhangu; Marcelo A Beltrán; Michael Bernhard; Walter L Biffl; Marja A Boermeester; Stephen M Brecher; Jill R Cherry-Bukowiec; Otmar R Buyne; Miguel A Cainzos; Kelly A Cairns; Adrian Camacho-Ortiz; Sujith J Chandy; Asri Che Jusoh; Alain Chichom-Mefire; Caroline Colijn; Francesco Corcione; Yunfeng Cui; Daniel Curcio; Samir Delibegovic; Zaza Demetrashvili; Belinda De Simone; Sameer Dhingra; José J Diaz; Isidoro Di Carlo; Angel Dillip; Salomone Di Saverio; Michael P Doyle; Gereltuya Dorj; Agron Dogjani; Hervé Dupont; Soumitra R Eachempati; Mushira Abdulaziz Enani; Valery N Egiev; Mutasim M Elmangory; Paula Ferrada; Joseph R Fitchett; Gustavo P Fraga; Nathalie Guessennd; Helen Giamarellou; Wagih Ghnnam; George Gkiokas; Staphanie R Goldberg; Carlos Augusto Gomes; Harumi Gomi; Manuel Guzmán-Blanco; Mainul Haque; Sonja Hansen; Andreas Hecker; Wolfgang R Heizmann; Torsten Herzog; Adrien Montcho Hodonou; Suk-Kyung Hong; Reinhold Kafka-Ritsch; Lewis J Kaplan; Garima Kapoor; Aleksandar Karamarkovic; Martin G Kees; Jakub Kenig; Ronald Kiguba; Peter K Kim; Yoram Kluger; Vladimir Khokha; Kaoru Koike; Kenneth Y Y Kok; Victory Kong; Matthew C Knox; Kenji Inaba; Arda Isik; Katia Iskandar; Rao R Ivatury; Maurizio Labbate; Francesco M Labricciosa; Pierre-François Laterre; Rifat Latifi; Jae Gil Lee; Young Ran Lee; Marc Leone; Ari Leppaniemi; Yousheng Li; Stephen Y Liang; Tonny Loho; Marc Maegele; Sydney Malama; Hany E Marei; Ignacio Martin-Loeches; Sanjay Marwah; Amos Massele; Michael McFarlane; Renato Bessa Melo; Ionut Negoi; David P Nicolau; Carl Erik Nord; Richard Ofori-Asenso; AbdelKarim H Omari; Carlos A Ordonez; Mouaqit Ouadii; Gerson Alves Pereira Júnior; Diego Piazza; Guntars Pupelis; Timothy Miles Rawson; Miran Rems; Sandro Rizoli; Claudio Rocha; Boris Sakakushev; Miguel Sanchez-Garcia; Norio Sato; Helmut A Segovia Lohse; Gabriele Sganga; Boonying Siribumrungwong; Vishal G Shelat; Kjetil Soreide; Rodolfo Soto; Peep Talving; Jonathan V Tilsed; Jean-Francois Timsit; Gabriel Trueba; Ngo Tat Trung; Jan Ulrych; Harry van Goor; Andras Vereczkei; Ravinder S Vohra; Imtiaz Wani; Waldemar Uhl; Yonghong Xiao; Kuo-Ching Yuan; Sanoop K Zachariah; Jean-Ralph Zahar; Tanya L Zakrison; Antonio Corcione; Rita M Melotti; Claudio Viscoli; Perluigi Viale
Journal:  World J Emerg Surg       Date:  2016-07-15       Impact factor: 5.469

9.  Epidemiology of intra-abdominal infection and sepsis in critically ill patients: "AbSeS", a multinational observational cohort study and ESICM Trials Group Project.

Authors:  Stijn Blot; Massimo Antonelli; Kostoula Arvaniti; Koen Blot; Ben Creagh-Brown; Dylan de Lange; Jan De Waele; Mieke Deschepper; Yalim Dikmen; George Dimopoulos; Christian Eckmann; Guy Francois; Massimo Girardis; Despoina Koulenti; Sonia Labeau; Jeffrey Lipman; Fernando Lipovestky; Emilio Maseda; Philippe Montravers; Adam Mikstacki; José-Artur Paiva; Cecilia Pereyra; Jordi Rello; Jean-Francois Timsit; Dirk Vogelaers
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2019-10-29       Impact factor: 17.440

10.  Epidemiology, clinical relevance and prognosis of staphylococci in hospital-acquired postoperative intra-abdominal infections: an observational study in intensive care unit.

Authors:  Kévin Boussion; Nathalie Zappella; Nathalie Grall; Lara Ribeiro-Parenti; Grégory Papin; Philippe Montravers
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-03-15       Impact factor: 4.379

View more
  1 in total

1.  Healthcare-associated infections in adult intensive care unit patients: Changes in epidemiology, diagnosis, prevention and contributions of new technologies.

Authors:  Stijn Blot; Etienne Ruppé; Stephan Harbarth; Karim Asehnoune; Garyphalia Poulakou; Charles-Edouard Luyt; Jordi Rello; Michael Klompas; Pieter Depuydt; Christian Eckmann; Ignacio Martin-Loeches; Pedro Povoa; Lila Bouadma; Jean-Francois Timsit; Jean-Ralph Zahar
Journal:  Intensive Crit Care Nurs       Date:  2022-03-03       Impact factor: 4.235

  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.