| Literature DB >> 34834917 |
Francesco Vladimiro Segala1, Davide Fiore Bavaro2, Francesco Di Gennaro2, Federica Salvati1, Claudia Marotta3, Annalisa Saracino2, Rita Murri1,4, Massimo Fantoni1,4.
Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance is an urgent threat to public health and global development; in this scenario, the SARS-CoV2 pandemic has caused a major disruption of healthcare systems and practices. A narrative review was conducted on articles focusing on the impact of COVID-19 on multidrug-resistant gram-negative, gram-positive bacteria, and fungi. We found that, worldwide, multiple studies reported an unexpected high incidence of infections due to methicillin-resistant S. aureus, carbapenem-resistant A. baumannii, carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae, and C. auris among COVID-19 patients admitted to the intensive care unit. In this setting, inappropriate antimicrobial exposure, environmental contamination, and discontinuation of infection control measures may have driven selection and diffusion of drug-resistant pathogens.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Candida auris; antimicrobial resistance; carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii; carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae; infection control; methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34834917 PMCID: PMC8624326 DOI: 10.3390/v13112110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Summary of the main results.
| Pathogen | Region | Pre-Pandemic Trend (2015–19) a | Study Type | Impact of COVID-19, Main Findings | Main Conclusions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Methicillin-resistant | EU, France | Decrease | Prospective, observational | 11/25 of early bacterial co-infections were due to | High proportion of | Elabbadi et al. |
| USA, New York | Decrease | Retrospective cohort | Prevalence of MRSA on respiratory cultures increased from 0.6 at day 3 to 5.7% at day 28 of hospitalization. MRSA PCR positive tests: 12/122 (100% negative predictive value) | The findings are keeping with decreasing rates of MRSA infections across the United States | Punjabi et al. | |
| Mixed | N/A | Meta-analysis | Over 18 studies, the meta-analysis found a 25.6% prevalence of COVID-19/ | High proportion of MRSA co-infections | Adeiza et al. | |
| EU, Italy | Decrease | Monocenter, case-control study | Among 40 COVID and non-COVID-19 ICU patients who developed ventilator-associated pneumonia due to | COVID-19 seemed to significantly affect microbiological and clinical features of SA-VAP | De Pascale et al. | |
| USA, New York | Decrease | Retrospective, multicenter case-series | Cusumano et al. | |||
| Vancomycin-resistant | EU, Germany | Increasing | Retrospective, monocenter case-series | Whole genome sequencing revealed close genetic relatedness between five VRE (E. faecium) isolated from patients and 11 VRE isolated from environment in a COVID-19 ICU | Importance of IPC measures to prevent VRE transmission | Kampmeier et al. |
| EU, Italy | Increasing | Retrospective, monocenter | Authors noted unprecedented high BSI incidence of (87/1000 d of ICU stay). Gram-positive bacteria accounted for 79.6% of episodes, with Enterococcus species being the most prevalent (55.8%). Thirty-two isolates (27.3%) showed multidrug resistance. | Increased rate of BSI due to | Bonazzetti et al. | |
| EU, Spain | Increasing | Monocenter, case-control study | Among 91 cases of co-infections, the most frequent bacterium among patients with primary BSI was | Increased rate of superinfections due to | Bardi et al. | |
| Carbapenem- resistant Enterobacteriaceae | Mixed | NA | Scoping review | The results indicate the need for attention to infections caused by carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae. There is also a need for the ongoing surveillance and control of hospital- acquired infections. The critically ill patients are the most susceptible to infection. | Unexpected high incidence of | Medrzycka-Dabrowska et al. |
| China | Unknown | Retrospective, monocenter | Higher rate of CRE colonization in patients undergoing positioning, if compared to patients who were not prone-positioned (67% vs. 37%) | High incidence and mortality of CRE secondary infections. | Yang et al. | |
| Peru | Unknown | Retrospective, monocenter | We reported an outbreak of Klebsiella pneumoniae New Delhi metallo-β-lactamase (NDM) in a Peruvian hospital where no cases of strains with this resistance had been identified previously | COVID-19 patients have a higher risk of acquiring MDR bacterial infections. | Arteaga-Livias et al. | |
| USA, New York | Stable | Retrospective, monocenter | Outbreak of five cases of nosocomial infection due to NDM-beta- lactamase producing Enterobacterales among COVID-19 patients | High incidence of CRE superinfection. Importante of AMS and IPC programs. | Nori et al. | |
| Carbapenem resistant | India | Unknown | Retrospective, multicenter | Out of 17,534 patients admitted among 10 indian hospitals, 3.6% of patients developed secondary bacterial or fungal infections. Gram-negative bacteria were isolated from 78% of patients. | High incidence of superinfection due to G- MDR pathogens. Importance of AMS and IPC programs. | Vijay et al. |
| Israel | Unknown | Retrospective, monocenter | Outbreak of five infections due to CRAB on both COVID-19 ICU and general ward. The suspected mechanism of transfer was an environmental source that was transmitted through healthcare workers’ hands or equipment. | Increased rate of CRAB secondary infections. Importance of AMS and IPC programs. | Gottesman et al. | |
| EU, Italy | Increasing | Monocenter, case-control | In ICU, | Increased rate of CRAB secondary infections. Importance of AMS and IPC programs. | Russo et al. | |
| EU, Spain | Increasing | Retrospective, monocenter | Among all patients admitted to COVID-ICU between 1 March—31 May 2020, 16.5% of all secondary infections (22/134) were due to drug-resistant | Increased rate of CRAB secondary infections. | Nebreda-Mayoral et al. | |
| Brasil | Unknown | Retrospective, monocenter | Outbreak of 14 infections due to CRAB in a new COVID-19 ICU between September and December 2020. | Increased rate of CRAB secondary infections. Role of IPC disruption. | Shinohara et al. | |
| Iran | Unknown | Prospective, monocenter | Among 19 patients admitted to COVID ICU, | Increased rate of CRAB and MRSA secondary infections. | Sharifipour et al. | |
| Carbapenem-resistant | EU, Italy | Decreasing | Prospective, monocenter | One-hundred and eighteen patients admitted to COVID-19 ICUs were included in the study. Among them, 12 (10.2%) became colonized/infected with CRPA, 6 (5.1%) with | Increased rate of secondary infections due to G- MDR pathogens and | Magnasco et al. |
| Triazole-resistant | Eu, France, The Netherlands, Ireland | Unknown | Case reports | Cases presented by Meijer et al. and Mohamed et al. harbored the TR34/L98H mutation. All patients presented in these reports died. | Importance of inappropiate empirical therapy on mortality. | Ghelfenstein-Ferreira et al. |
|
| EU, Italy | Unknown | Monocenter case series | Nosocomial cluster of 10 | Spread of | Di Pilato et al. |
| Brazil | Unknown | Prevalence investigation | Among body swabs collected from 47 patients, eight (n = 8/47, 17%) samples from the axillae were positive for | Increased incidence of | Nobrega de Almeida Jr et al. | |
| India, New Delhi | Unknown | Retrospective, monocenter | Candidemia affected 15 critically ill coronavirus disease patients admitted to an intensive care unit during April–July 2020. | Increased incidence of | Chowdhary et al. | |
| Mexico | Unknown | Retrospective, monocenter | Outbreak of | Increased incidence of | Villanueva-Lozano et al. |
a pre-pandemic trend, when available, is the one reported by the European Center of Disease prevention and Control [6], the World Health Organization [8], and the Center for Disease prevention and Control [7]. MRSA: methicillin-resistant S. aureus; ICU: intensive care unit; VRE: vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus spp.; IPC: infection prevention and control; BSI: bloodstream infection; NDM: New-Delhi Metallo beta-lactamases; AMS: antimicrobial stewardship; MDR: multidrug-resistant; CRAB: carbapenem-resistant A. baumannii.