| Literature DB >> 34744337 |
Naresh Jadhav1, Jharna Mandal2, Smita Kayal1, Jogamaya Pattnaik1, Ponraj Madasamy1, Jagdeep Singh1, Biswajit Dubashi1.
Abstract
The study aimed at identifying the profile of gut colonization of patients with acute leukemia who underwent induction chemotherapy and its association with induction events and outcome. Baseline bacterial stool culture with resistance pattern of isolates were recorded. Multi-drug resistance was defined as resistance to at least two antibiotic classes including beta lactam and fluoroquinolones. During induction chemotherapy, blood and clinically indicated cultures were taken during febrile neutropenic episodes. Association studies were done between gut colonization and induction events/outcome. Among 109 patients enrolled, 71 (65.13%) patients undergoing induction chemotherapy were colonized with bacteria, with nearly 50% of colonizers harboring multi-drug resistant bacteria. Organisms isolated from stool pre-induction were mostly gram negative (98%), with Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae being the commonest. 65.13% patients developed febrile neutropenia. Overall multi-drug resistant positivity during febrile neutropenia was 70.14%. Concordance of 8.45% was observed between isolates from stool and organisms isolated from cultures during febrile neutropenia. There were significant proportion of gut colonized gram-negative multi-drug resistance bacteria among patients with acute leukemia. There was a low concordance rate between baseline stool isolates and subsequent cultures during the induction. There was no significant association between gut colonization and induction events/outcomes studied. © Indian Society of Hematology and Blood Transfusion 2020.Entities:
Keywords: Acute leukemia; Febrile neutropenia; Leukemia induction; Microbiologically documented infection; Surveillance stool culture
Year: 2020 PMID: 34744337 PMCID: PMC8523636 DOI: 10.1007/s12288-020-01377-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Hematol Blood Transfus ISSN: 0971-4502 Impact factor: 0.915