Literature DB >> 35027010

A clinical prediction tool for extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae urinary tract infection.

Hui Liu1, Suishan Qiu1, Minghao Chen1, Jun Lyu2, Guangchao Yu3, Lianfang Xue4,5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Prevalence of extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing-Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-E) has risen in patients with urinary tract infections. The objective of this study was to determine explore the risk factors of ESBL-E infection in hospitalized patients and establish a predictive model.
METHODS: This retrospective study included all patients with an Enterobacteriaceae-positive urine sample at the first affiliated hospital of Jinan university from January 2018 to December 2019. Antimicrobial susceptibility patterns of ESBL-E were analyzed, and multivariate analysis of related factors was performed. From these, a nomogram was established to predict the possibility of ESBL-E infection. Simultaneously, susceptibility testing of a broad array of carbapenem antibiotics was performed on ESBL-E cultures to explore possible alternative treatment options.
RESULTS: Of the total 874 patients with urinary tract infections (UTIs), 272 (31.1%) were ESBL-E positive. In the predictive analysis, five variables were identified as independent risk factors for ESBL-E infection: male gender (OR = 1.607, 95% CI 1.066-2.416), older age (OR = 4.100, 95% CI 1.678-12.343), a hospital stay in preceding 3 months (OR = 1.872, 95% CI 1.141-3.067), invasive urological procedure (OR = 1.810, 95% CI 1.197-2.729), and antibiotic use within the previous 3 months (OR = 1.833, 95% CI 1.055-3.188). In multivariate analysis, the data set was divided into a training set of 611 patients and a validation set of 263 patients The model developed to predict ESBL-E infection was effective, with the AuROC of 0.650 (95% CI 0.577-0.725). Among the antibiotics tested, several showed very high effectiveness against ESBL-E: amikacin (85.7%), carbapenems (83.8%), tigecycline (97.1%) and polymyxin (98.2%).
CONCLUSIONS: The nomogram is useful for estimating a UTI patient's likelihood of infection with ESBL-E. It could improve clinical decision making and enable more efficient empirical treatment. Empirical treatment may be informed by the results of the antibiotic susceptibility testing.
© 2022. The Author(s).

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35027010      PMCID: PMC8756698          DOI: 10.1186/s12879-022-07040-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Infect Dis        ISSN: 1471-2334            Impact factor:   3.090


Background

Extended-spectrum beta-lactamase producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-E) are a diverse family of Gram-negative bacteria, mainly Escherichia coli (E. coli) and Klebsiella pneumoniae (K. pneumoniae), which express a clinically concerning drug resistance mechanism [1]. ESBL-E can hydrolyze and eliminate most broad-spectrum β-lactam antibiotics. Compared with non-ESBL-E infections, serious infections caused by ESBL-E have higher morbidity and mortality [2]. ESBL-E hydrolysis of carbapenem antibiotics is low, so carbapenem antibiotics are often used as the first choice in clinical treatment of ESBL-E infections. However, the abuse of carbapenems may result in the selection of carbapenem resistant Enterobacteriaceae, which will ultimately make it more difficult to treat this kind of bacteria [3, 4]. UTIs are the most common class of infectious disease, and antibiotics are their main means of treatment. The most common pathogen group in urine cultures is PE, which accounts for 30% to 40% of all urine culture bacteria [5]. In recent years, ESBL-E infection has been on the rise, and it is the main cause of hospital and community-acquired infections. In a study of antimicrobial resistance trends from 2010 to 2013, ESBL-E was frequently detected in China and Southeast Asia, and the ESBL production rate of E. coli and K. pneumoniae in some Asian countries was as high as 60% [6]. A study by Vachvanichsanong estimated that ESBL-E represented one-third of all E. coli and K. pneumoniae UTI episodes [7]. Data from the CHINET antimicrobial resistance monitoring project shows that the ESBL-producing isolates resistant to 3rd generation of cephalosporins increasing from 52.2 to 63.2% between 2005 and 2014 in China [8]. Several studies have suggested that infections caused by ESBL-E have an important clinical impact, and the growing prevalence of these microorganisms in hospitals had been well proven [2, 4]. Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are the main type of bacterial infection in hospitalized patients, and many of these exhibit resistances to the first-line antibiotics usually used to treat UTIs. Infections caused by ESBL-E frequency increased at a faster rate in health associated settings than in the community between 2014 and 2020 [9]. Patients who are identified to be at risk of ESBL-E infection can have their treatment empirically tailored to reduce treatment failure, complications, and antibiotic costs, and to avoid improper use of carbapenem drugs, reducing the risk of selecting drug-resistant microorganisms [10]. A key component of managing ESBL-E infection is to predict its incidence. A highly accurate predictive model can help identify high-risk patients and prevent or reduce the incidence of ESBL-E infection. However, neither test indicators nor imaging tests can yet predict ESBL-E infection. Therefore, this study aims to determine the prevalence and risk factors of ESBL-E infection in hospitalized patients with urinary tract infections and to establish a reliable predictive model.

Methods

Study population

This study was conducted at a university-affiliated tertiary hospital with 1900 beds. This study was conducted at the first affiliated hospital of Jinan university, a university-affiliated tertiary hospital in Guangzhou, China with 1900 beds. All cases from January 2018 to December 2019 in which all of a patient’s urine cultures tested positive for Enterobacteriaceae were reviewed. All non-repetitive mid-stream urine (MSU) samples obtained during the study period with a positive urine culture of either E. coli or K. pneumoniae were included in the analysis. In the annual microbiological epidemiology report of our hospital, 95% of the urine bacterial culture results were E coli and K. pneumoniae, and Proteus mirabilis and Salmonella accounted for the remaining 5%. However, no strains of ESBL positive were found in the strains of Proteus mirabilis and Salmonella, so these two types of bacteria were not included in this study. UTIs were defined in accordance with uniform diagnostic criteria of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (ESCMID) [11]. Patients were excluded from the study if their medical records were missing data or if one or more of their samples were multi-microorganismal-defined as containing two or more pathogenic species in the same urine culture medium.

Data collection and definitions of variables

To identify predictors of urinary tract infections caused by ESBL-E, we referred to previously reported studies on risk factors related to multidrug resistance, including ESBL. Demographic and clinical data were obtained from medical records. The collected variables included age, gender, comorbid diseases, hospital admission history, undergoing an invasive urological procedure (such as intubation or catheterization), treatment history, and antibiotic use in the past 3 months. Comorbid diseases included chronic diabetes mellitus, chronic renal failure, immunodeficiency, neoplasia, recurrent UTIs, and severe underlying disease. Hospital admission history included such items as admission times, hospital stays in preceding 3 months, and admission history to the medical department, surgical department, or ICU.

Susceptibility testing

The drug susceptibility test used the paper diffusion method in accordance with the Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI). The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) was passed through the Vitek 2 automated microbial identification system (Vitek AMS; bioMerieux Vitek Systems Inc., Hazelwood, Missouri). All results met the CLSI Enterobacteriaceae standards. Six types of antibacterial agents were tested: β-lactam/β-lactam Enzyme inhibitor combination (cefoperazone-sulbactam, piperacillin-tazobactam), cephalexin (ceftazolin, cefotaxime, ceftazidime, ceftriaxone, cefepime), carbapenem (imipenem, meropenem), aminoglycoside (amikacin), folate pathway inhibitor (trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole), and fluoroquinolone (Levofloxacin) (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, Missouri). Quality control was performed on E. coli (ATCC 25922) and K. pneumoniae (ATCC 700603) [12].

Statistical analysis

As age and admission times are continuous variables with non-normal distribution, both were grouped into categories (0–18 years, 18–60 years, 60+ years); thus, all data existed in the form of categorical variables. We first numbered 874 patients, randomly sampled the numbers with the “sample” command in R software, and used the “set. Seed” and ind <-sample (n, 0.7 * n) commands at the same time. The randomly sampled patients were divided into a training set and a validation set. 611 patients (70% of the study) were randomly selected as the training set, and 263 patients (the other 30%) were selected as the validation set. Internal verification was carried out using a resampling-based method. Pearson's chi-square test or Fisher's exact test was used to compare differences between data sets, as appropriate, and for univariate analysis in the training set. All variables with a P value less than 0.1 in the univariate analysis were input into the multivariate analysis to further select the variables in the predictive model. A predictive model was established by applying multivariate logistic regression with variables selected from multivariate analysis. The risk predictive model of ESBL-E infection was presented using a nomogram. The predictive model was evaluated on three criteria: discriminatory capacity, calibration ability, and clinical effectiveness. The AuROC was used to evaluate discriminative ability. The calibration curve and Hosmer–Lemeshow test were used to evaluate its calibration ability. Decision curve analysis (DCA) was used to evaluate clinical efficacy. All tests were two-tailed, and a P value of less than 0.05 was considered statistically significant. All statistical analyses were performed using R software (version 3.6.3, Vienna, Austria).

Results

Demographics and clinical characteristics

Figure 1 shows the overall experimental flow. The organisms of interest, E. coli and K. pneumoniae, were identified in urine cultures from 885 unique patients during the study period. Of these, 11 were removed from the dataset: 9 cases were missing data, and 2 cases were identified to contain 2 pathogenic species. Table 1 shows a comparison of the demographic and clinical factors between the ESBL-E and non-ESBL-E patients. The median (IQR) ages at presentation were 65.5 (52–76) years for the ESBL-E group and 61 (49–74) years for the non-ESBL-E group (P < 0.001). The proportions of ESBL-E infections among males and females were 33.5% and 66.5%, respectively (P = 0.05). The two groups were compared across numerous factors: several comorbid diseases, hospital admission history, invasive urological procedure treatment history, and antibiotic use in the past 3 months. Those which showed significant differences (P < 0.05) were: diabetes mellitus, severe underlying disease, a hospital stay in the preceding 3 months, prior admission to the medical department, prior admission to the surgical department, prior admission to the ICU, undergoing an invasive urological procedure, and antibiotic use in the past 3 months. Among microorganisms, E. coli (739 cases, 84.6%) was the most commonly isolated species, with K. pneumoniae (135 cases, 15.4%) comprising the remainder.
Fig. 1

Experimental flowchart

Table 1

Demographic data, clinical characteristics

VariablesOverall (n = 874)Non-ESBL-E (n = 602)ESBL-E(n = 272)P value
Gender, n (%)0.050
Male236 (27.0)145 (24.1)91 (33.5)
Female638 (73.0)457 (75.9)181 (66.5)
Age (years), [median (IQR)]62.0 (50–75)61 (49–74)65.5(52–76) < 0.001
Comorbidity diseases
 Diabetes mellitus, n (%)0.038
  Yes287 (32.8)211 (35.0)76 (27.9)
  No587 (67.2)391 (65.0)196 (72.1)
 Chronic renal failure, n (%)0.208
  Yes123 (14.1)91 (15.1)32 (11.8)
  No751 (85.9)511 (84.9)240 (88.2)
 Immunodeficiency, n (%)0.056
  Yes51 (5.8)29 (4.8)22 (8.1)
  No823 (94.2)573 (95.2)250 (91.9)
 Neoplasia, n (%)0.072
  Yes103 (11.8)63 (10.5)40 (14.7)
  No771 (88.2)539 (89.5)232 (85.3)
 Recurrent Urinary tract infections, n (%) < 0.001
  Yes134 (15.3)66 (11.0)68 (25.0)
  No740 (84.7)536 (89.0)204 (75.0)
 Severe underlying disease, n (%)0.009
  Yes66 (7.6)36 (6.0)30 (11.0)
  No808 (92.4)566 (94.0)242 (89.0)
 Hospital stays in preceding 3 months, n (%) < 0.001
  Yes309 (35.4)168 (27.9)141 (51.8)
  No565 (64.6)434 (72.1)131 (48.2)
Previous hospitalization department
 Medical department, n (%)0.005
  Yes265 (30.3)165 (27.4)100 (36.8)
  No609 (69.7)437 (72.6)172 (63.2)
 Surgical department, n (%) < 0.001
  Yes174 (19.9)99 (16.4)75 (27.6)
  No700 (80.1)503 (83.6)197 (72.4)
 Intensive Care Unit (ICU), n (%)0.047
  Yes10 (1.1)4 (0.7)6 (2.2)
  No864 (98.9)598 (99.3)266 (97.8)
 Invasive urological procedure, n (%) < 0.001
  Yes269 (30.8)150 (24.9)119 (43.8)
 No605 (69.2)452 (75.1)153 (56.3)
 Antibiotic use in the past 3 months, n (%) < 0.001
  Yes190 (21.7)91 (15.1)99 (36.4)
  No684 (78.3)511 (84.9)173 (63.6)
 Microorganism, n (%)
  Escherichia coli739 (84.6)540 (89.7)199 (73.2) < 0.001
  Klebsiella sp.135 (15.4)62 (10.3)73 (26.8) < 0.001
 Mortality, n (%)
  Secondary to infection6 (0.7)4 (0.7)2 (0.7)0.604
  Other cause7 (0.8)3 (0.5)4 (1.5)0.140
Experimental flowchart Demographic data, clinical characteristics Following random sampling, 611 patients, including 191 (31.3%) ESBL-E patients, were included in the training set. The remaining 263 patients, with 82 (31.2%) ESBL-E patients, were assigned to the validation set. No significant difference in the variables was observed between the training validation sets (all P > 0.05), as shown in Table 2.
Table 2

Clinical features and risk factor exposition in the study population

VariablesOverall (n = 874)Training set (n = 611)Validation set (n = 263)P value
Status, n (%)0.981
 ESBL−602 (68.9)420 (68.7)181 (68.8)
 ESBL+ 272 (31.1)191 (31.3)82 (31.2)
Gender, n (%)0.111
 Male236 (27.0)176 (28.8)62 (23.6)
 Female638 (73.0)435 (71.2)201 (76.4)
Age, n (%)0.543
 0 to 18 years70 (8.0)49 (8.0)21 (8.0)
 18 to 60 years309 (35.4)209 (34.2)100 (38.0)
 Over 60 years495 (56.6)353 (57.8)142 (54.0)
Comorbidity diseases
 Diabetes mellitus, n (%)0.920
  Yes287 (32.8)200 (32.7)87 (33.1)
  No587 (67.2)411 (67.3)176 (66.9)
 Chronic renal failure, n (%)0.998
  Yes123 (14.1)86 (14.1)37 (14.1)
  No751 (85.9)525 (85.9)226 (85.9)
 Immunodeficiency, n (%)0.913
  Yes51 (5.8)36 (5.9)15 (5.7)
  No823 (94.2)575 (94.1)248 (94.3)
 Neoplasia, n(%)0.170
  Yes103 (11.8)78 (12.8)25 (9.5)
  No771 (88.2)533 (87.2)238 (90.5)
Recurrent Urinary tract infections, n (%)0.496
 Yes134 (15.3)97 (15.9)37 (14.1)
 No740 (84.7)514 (84.1)226 (85.9)
 Severe underlying disease, n (%)0.056
  Yes66 (7.6)53 (8.7)13 (4.9)
  No808 (92.4)558 (91.3)250 (95.1)
Hospital admission history
 Admission times, n (%)0.555
  1 to 2 times645 (73.8)455 (74.5)190 (72.2)
  3 to 6 times159 (18.2)111 (18.2)48 (18.3)
  More than 6 times70 (8.0)45 (7.4)25 (9.5)
 Hospital stay in preceding 3 months, n (%)0.645
  Yes309 (35.4)219 (35.8)90 (34.2)
  No565 (64.6)392 (64.2)173 (65.8)
Previous hospitalization department
 Medical department, n (%)0.905
  Yes265 (30.3)186 (30.4)79 (30.0)
  No609 (69.7)425 (69.6)184 (70.0)
 Surgical department, n (%)0.111
  Yes174 (19.9)113 (18.5)61 (23.2)
  No700 (80.1)498 (81.5)202 (76.8)
 Intensive Care Unit (ICU), n (%)0.724
  Yes10 (1.1)8 (1.3)2 (0.8)
  No864 (98.9)603 (98.7)261 (99.2)
Treatment history
 Invasive urological procedure, n (%)0.880
  Yes269 (30.8)189 (30.9)80 (30.4)
  No605 (69.2)422 (69.1)183 (69.6)
 Antibiotic use in the past 3 months, n (%)0.570
  Yes190 (21.7)136 (22.3)54 (20.5)
  No684 (78.3)475 (77.7)209 (79.5)
Clinical features and risk factor exposition in the study population

Independent risk factors in the training set

The risk factor analysis was based on the 874 patients in the training set. Univariate and multivariate analysis for ESBL-E infection is shown in Table 3. Eleven variables were identified by univariate analysis (P < 0.1): gender, age, immunodeficiency, urinary tract infections, severe underlying disease, hospital stay in preceding 3 months, prior admission to medical department, prior admission to surgical department, prior admission to ICU, prior invasive urological procedure, and antibiotic use in the past 3 months.
Table 3

Univariate and Multivariate analysis in the training set

VariablesUnivariateMultivariate
OR95% CIP valueOR95% CIP value
Gender
 Male1.6541.143–2.3880.00731.6071.066–2.4160.023
 FemaleReferenceReference
Age
 0 to 18 yearsReferenceReference
 18 to 60 years3.7121.529–11.1080.0082.8251.119–8.6790.043
 Over 60 years4.7652.015–14.0350.0014.1001.678–12.3430.005
Diabetes mellitus
 Yes0.8840.610–1.2740.513
 NoReference
Chronic renal failure
 Yes0.8860.529–1.4460.637
 NoReference
Immunodeficiency
 Yes1.8290.914–3.6060.0821.6710.770–3.5790.187
 NoReferenceReference
Neoplasia
 Yes1.4440.875–2.3510.143
 NoReference
Recurrent urinary tract infections
 Yes2.1811.398–3.396 < 0.0011.1450.645–2.0110.639
 NoReferenceReference
Severe underlying disease
 Yes2.2941.295–4.0580.0041.5360.805–2.9070.188
 NoReferenceReference
Admission times
 1 to 2 timesReference
 3 to 6 times1.0470.664–1.6270.841
 More than 6 times1.3800.719–2.5800.320
Hospital stay in preceding 3 months
 Yes3.0672.152–4.389 < 0.0011.8721.141–3.0670.013
 NoReferenceReference
Medical department
 Yes1.5161.052–2.1790.0250.7990.498–1.2660.344
 NoReferenceReference
Surgical department
 Yes1.7511.145–2.6630.0090.9430.572–1.5330.816
 NoReferenceReference
Intensive Care Unit (ICU)
 Yes3.7370.907–18.3700.0731.6930.346–9.8160.524
 NoReferenceReference
Invasive urological procedure
 Yes2.7921.945–4.017 < 0.0011.8101.197–2.7290.005
 NoReferenceReference
Antibiotic use in the past 3 months
 Yes3.2312.179–4.807 < 0.0011.8331.055- 3.1880.031
 NoReferenceReference
Univariate and Multivariate analysis in the training set Multivariate analysis was performed with the eleven variables identified by univariate analysis. Five variables were proved to be independent predictors for ESBL-E infection: male gender (OR = 1.607, 95% CI 1.066–2.416), older age (OR = 4.100, 95% CI 1.678–12.343), a hospital stay in preceding 3 months (OR = 1.872, 95% CI 1.141–3.067), invasive urological procedure (OR = 1.810, 95% CI 1.197–2.729), and antibiotic use within the previous 3 months (OR = 1.833, 95% CI 1.055–3.188).

Predictive model construction and validation

An ESBL-E infection risk estimation nomogram model was developed by logistic regression using the five independent predictors (Fig. 2). When present, each of the predictors contributes between 30 and 100 points to a final point total. This point total is then used to estimate the probability that the patient should can diagnosed as ESBL-E positive. To calculate the probability of a patient having ESBL-E infection, identify patient values on each axis, then for each draw a vertical line upwards to the “Points” axis. This determines how many points each variable generates. Add the points for all variables and locate this sum on the “Total points” line. Then draw a vertical line downwards from this point and identify the recurrence risk probability of ESBL-E infection. Hospital stay = Hospital stay in preceding 3 months; IOP = invasive urological procedure; Antibiotic use = Antibiotic use in the past 3 months.
Fig. 2

A nomogram for predicting the probability of ESBL-producing pathogen infection. Each variable is scored vertically against the Points scale at the top of the nomogram. The scores for all variables are then summed to obtain the patient’s Total Points, which are compared vertically against the corresponding Diagnostic possibility scale to estimate the probability of ESBL-producing pathogen infection

A nomogram for predicting the probability of ESBL-producing pathogen infection. Each variable is scored vertically against the Points scale at the top of the nomogram. The scores for all variables are then summed to obtain the patient’s Total Points, which are compared vertically against the corresponding Diagnostic possibility scale to estimate the probability of ESBL-producing pathogen infection The AUC was used to evaluate the discriminatory capacity of the predictive model, and the nomogram demonstrated good accuracy in estimating the risk of ESBL-E infection. The AUC of ROC was 0.714 (95% CI 0.671–0.757) in the training set (Fig. 3A). In validation set, the AUC of ROC was 0.650 (95% CI 0.577–0.725) (Fig. 3B).
Fig. 3

ROC curves form the training (A) and validation set (B) with AUC and 95% CI

ROC curves form the training (A) and validation set (B) with AUC and 95% CI A calibration plot and Hosmer–Lemeshow test were used to the calibrate the predictive model (Fig. 4). The calibration curves show the predictive model and the validation set produce very good fits of the data. The Hosmer–Lemeshow test indicates that the predicted probability is highly consistent with the actual probability (training set, P = 0.999; validation set, P = 0.732). Decision curve analysis, shown in Fig. 5, was used to demonstrate the net benefits of this predictive model. Its strong predictive capacity allows for accurate diagnosis, which should result in better patient treatment than either non-diagnosis or full diagnosis.
Fig. 4

Calibration plots. The shadow line represents perfect prediction by an ideal model. The solid line shows the model’s performance using the training set (A) and validation set (B), with Hosmer–Lemeshow test P values of 0.999 and 0.732, respectively. The dotted line represents the predictive performance by a nonparametric model using the training set (A) and validation set (B)

Fig. 5

Decision curve analysis of the training set (A) and validation set (B). The black solid line indicates that no patients were treated. The grey solid line indicates that all patients were treated. The dotted line indicates treatment according to the model. The area between the dotted line, the grey solid line, and the black solid line represents the net benefit accrued by utilizing the model

Calibration plots. The shadow line represents perfect prediction by an ideal model. The solid line shows the model’s performance using the training set (A) and validation set (B), with Hosmer–Lemeshow test P values of 0.999 and 0.732, respectively. The dotted line represents the predictive performance by a nonparametric model using the training set (A) and validation set (B) Decision curve analysis of the training set (A) and validation set (B). The black solid line indicates that no patients were treated. The grey solid line indicates that all patients were treated. The dotted line indicates treatment according to the model. The area between the dotted line, the grey solid line, and the black solid line represents the net benefit accrued by utilizing the model

Antibiotic susceptibility testing

Table 4 indicates the overall antimicrobial susceptibility of PE to the antibiotics tested. The highest sensitivity was observed with amikacin (94.7%), carbapenem (95.0%), polymyxin (99.2%), tigecycline (98.9%), and latamoxef (91.2%). Except for latamoxef and cefdinir, there are statistically significant (P < 0.05) differences in the susceptibility of all antibacterial drugs between the two groups.
Table 4

Antibiogram result of PE

AntibioticsAntibiogram resultTotalSENP value
Non-ESBL-EESBL-E
SIRSENSIRSEN
Ciprofloxacin3042426551.339522014.885740.0 < 0.001
Levofloxacin2466624644.1351821912.987432.2 < 0.001
P/T58014896.3167356961.687385.6 < 0.001
Ceftazidime540431690.226491969.687065.1 < 0.001
C/S5907398.3166317561.087286.7 < 0.001
Cefepime533234588.718462076.687263.2 < 0.001
Aztreonam56113094.81822426.985467.8 < 0.001
Amikacin5954398.823343585.787494.7 < 0.001
Tobramycin4381153974.0127538148.785366.2 < 0.001
Carbapenem60200100.022804483.887495.0 < 0.001
TMP-SMX312128851.982018830.487145.2 < 0.001
Polymyxin6000299.72670598.287499.20.033
Doxycycline27112320445.3734315526.986939.6 < 0.001
Minocycline3718013962.9963912636.885154.9 < 0.001
Tigecycline5900299.72380797.183798.90.004
Cefixime45013425.1102350.441511.1 < 0.001
Latamoxef530296.4500886.211391.20.095
Cefdinir10204.810931.11151.70.333
Ceftriaxone3880399.220454.343889.0 < 0.001
Cefmetazole9200100.0401422.211087.3 < 0.001
Ceftizoxime3900100.000100.04979.6 < 0.001

S, Sensitive; I, Intermediate; R, Resistant; SEN, Sensitivity, %; P/T, piperacillin/tazobactam; C/S, cefoperazone/sulbactam; TMP-SMX, trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole

Antibiogram result of PE S, Sensitive; I, Intermediate; R, Resistant; SEN, Sensitivity, %; P/T, piperacillin/tazobactam; C/S, cefoperazone/sulbactam; TMP-SMX, trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole

Discussion

In this study, we propose a valuable clinical tool to predict the possibility of ESBL producing organisms as the etiology of urinary tract infection in hospitalized patients. Our prediction tool consists of five variables, including three clinical categories: gender, age, hospital stay in the preceding 3 months, invasive urological procedures, and antibiotic use in the past 3 months. The scoring system is feasible in clinical practice because it contains patient factors that can be easily determined from medical records and can be implemented with minimal health system cost. First, we found that older patients were significantly more likely to get ESBL-E infections. Older age more likely to get ESBL-E infections, which is in agreement with prior studies [13, 14]. Second, in univariate and multivariate regression analysis, gender specifically, being male is an independent risk factor. Many previous studies similarly consider being male a predictor of infection [10, 15]. Third, we showed that prior hospital stays were a predictor for ESBL-E infection. This comports well with previous work which shows that hospital stays increase the risk of carrying ESBL-E [16]. The epidemiology of these ESBL-producing bacteria is becoming more and more complicated [17]. Fourth, we included invasive urological procedures, such as intubation and catheterization, as an ESBL-E UTI predictor, in agreement with previously published literature [18]. Invasive procedures can damage the skin and mucous membranes, thereby increasing the chance of contact with ESBL-producing bacterial strains [19]. Lastly, in this study, we found an association between the use of antibiotics in the past 3 months and the occurrence of ESBL-E in UTI. The abuse of antibiotics in recent years has led to an increase in antibiotic resistance. ESBL-E colonization is a known risk factor for subsequent infection or bacteremia [20, 21]. Additionally, the improper use of antibacterial drugs has been shown to play a key role in the emergence of multi-drug resistant organisms. The selection of resistant forms may occur during or after antimicrobial treatment. Further, comorbidities such as diabetes, chronic renal insufficiency, serious underlying diseases, and tumors were not considered predictors of UTIs caused by ESBL-E [22], and they were found to not be significant contributors in this study either. Nomogram is based on multi-factor regression analysis, integrating multiple predictive indicators, and then using scaled line segments, drawn on the same plane according to a certain ratio, so as to express the relationship between the various variables in the prediction model mutual relations. The nomogram transforms the complex regression equation into a visualized graph, making the results of the prediction model more readable and facilitating the evaluation of the patient [23]. The production and evaluation of nomogram is in accordance with conventional methods. The ROC curves, Decision curve analysis and Calibration plots in the article are all evaluations of nomogram, indicating that our nomogram is reasonable. E.g., Assuming a patient of 65 age, male, who has no history of hospitalization, has not undergone surgery but has used antibiotics within three months. We calculate the total points are 160, then the probability of an ESBL-E infection is 38%. Our clinical prediction tool provides doctors with an easy-to-use mechanism to improve the method of determining which patients with urinary tract infection may need broad-spectrum antibiotic coverage. The purpose of wider spectrum coverage is to ensure that individuals are initially treated with appropriate antibiotics. The tool showed excellent discrimination in the derivation queue with AUC of 0.714, but only moderate discrimination in the verification queue with AUC of 0.650. Because urine samples are highly contaminated clinical biological samples, considering the high risk of urine contamination, the AUC of our prediction model is acceptable. Although our nomogram is not perfect and could not be 100% predicted, when patients find urinary tract infection, it has certain guiding significance for doctors' initial medication decision, and more reasonable antibiotics can be selected as soon as possible. In addition to building a predictive model, numerous carbapenem antibiotics were tested against ESBL-E cultures to determine whether these resistant bacteria could be combatted by less-common treatments. A previous study found that there was a correlation between CTX-M-producing bacteria, one of the three most common ESBLs genes in E. coli and K. pneumoniae, and fluoroquinolones resistance [24]. They showed that ESBL-E had an 87.1% resistance rate to levofloxacin. It has been demonstrated that antibiotics (prophylactic or therapeutic) can induce antibiotic resistance genes that respond to ESBL-E infection [25]. Nonstandard antibiotic treatments, such as those explored here, are therefore necessary. We showed that carbapenems and aminoglycosides, such as amikacin, seem to be good choices for the treatment of serious infectious diseases of ESBL-E, though they may introduce other complicating factors such as the need to closely monitor renal response. Previous studies have shown that the proportion of carbapenem-resistant producing-Enterobacteriaceae in UTIs is less than 3% [26-28]. However, in this study, we found that carbapenem-resistant producing-Enterobacteriaceae could be as high as 5%, especially in the ESLB-E group, the resistance rate of carbapenems was 16.2%. Tigecycline and polymyxin were also demonstrated to be highly effective against ESBL-E. Previous work has found that tigecycline has clinical effectiveness in the treatment of UTIs; however, its use is still controversial due to a lack of data and randomized controlled trials [29]. The authors recommended using tigecycline only in the absence of other potential treatments; if aminoglycosides or β-lactams can be used to treat UTI, tigecycline should be avoided. Similarly, while polymyxin is shown to be an effective treatment for UTIs, its partial conversion to colistin in the urine may induce nephrotoxicity, so it should be used with caution. The effectiveness of piperacillin/tazobactam and cefoperazone/sulbactam against ESBL-E were about 60%. ESBLs are generally inhibited by tazobactam [18], which could be a suitable option for initial empirical medication of ESBL-E high-risk groups. Latamoxef showed high effectiveness against ESBL-E, but due to the small number of subjects using the drug, further verification is needed. This study has several limitations and ways it could be improved in the future. First, it is a retrospective case–control study with election bias. Second, some data may be missing from the medical records. Third, this study was conducted in a large hospital in China, and only inpatients were recruited; therefore, patients may not be representative of the greater Chinese or world populations. Finally, the overall sample size was too small to include more research factors, but the age span of the population included in this study was large. In the next step of the research, we will increase the sample size, more stringent review of electronic medical records, sub-group analysis for different age groups, and external verification to optimize the model to improve prediction accuracy. Since the proportion of ESBL + resistant strains in our hospital have reached more than 30%, it is very valuable to find a clinical prediction model that could improve the drug resistance of urinary tract infections. Our prediction model is more suitable for hospitals with high ESBL + resistance rates as a reference.

Conclusion

The prevalence of ESBL-E in patients with urinary tract infections in the Chinese hospital system continues to grow, especially among men and the elderly. Hospitalization in the first 3 months, invasive urological procedures, and the use of antibiotics in the past 3 months further increase the risk of infection. The nomogram developed in this study can be used to identify high-risk patients. These patients may benefit from empirical antibiotic prescriptions, such as those explored in this study. Doing so may reduce the failure rate of treatment as promote responsible use of antibiotics which might otherwise contribute to the growing trend of antibiotic resistance.
  29 in total

1.  Extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae in hospital urinary tract infections: incidence and antibiotic susceptibility profile over 9 years.

Authors:  Liam Toner; Nathan Papa; Sani H Aliyu; Harveer Dev; Nathan Lawrentschuk; Samih Al-Hayek
Journal:  World J Urol       Date:  2015-10-28       Impact factor: 4.226

2.  Urinary tract infection caused by extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing bacteria: Risk factors and antibiotic resistance.

Authors:  Jumana H Albaramki; Tariq Abdelghani; Alaa Dalaeen; Fareed Khdair Ahmad; Abeer Alassaf; Rasha Odeh; Kamal Akl
Journal:  Pediatr Int       Date:  2019-11-13       Impact factor: 1.524

3.  Prediction of infection caused by extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae: development of a clinical decision-making nomogram.

Authors:  Ana García-Tello; Helena Gimbernat; Cristina Redondo; Elisa Meilán; David M Arana; Juana Cacho; Juan F Dorado; Javier C Angulo
Journal:  Scand J Urol       Date:  2017-09-11       Impact factor: 1.612

Review 4.  ESCMID guidelines for the management of the infection control measures to reduce transmission of multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria in hospitalized patients.

Authors:  E Tacconelli; M A Cataldo; S J Dancer; G De Angelis; M Falcone; U Frank; G Kahlmeter; A Pan; N Petrosillo; J Rodríguez-Baño; N Singh; M Venditti; D S Yokoe; B Cookson
Journal:  Clin Microbiol Infect       Date:  2014-01       Impact factor: 8.067

5.  Frequency of occurrence and antimicrobial susceptibility of Gram-negative bacteremia isolates in patients with urinary tract infection: results from United States and European hospitals (2009-2011).

Authors:  Helio S Sader; Robert K Flamm; Ronald N Jones
Journal:  J Chemother       Date:  2013-12-06       Impact factor: 1.714

6.  Infections Caused by Extended-Spectrum β-Lactamase Producing Escherichia Coli in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Patients: Prevalence, Risk Factors, and Predictive Model.

Authors:  Yuetian Yu; Hui Shen; Cheng Zhu; Ruru Guo; Yuan Gao; Liangjing Lu
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2018-11-18       Impact factor: 3.411

7.  Clinical Prediction Score for Community-Onset Bloodstream Infections Caused by Extended-Spectrum Beta-Lactamase-Producing Escherichia coli and Klebsiella Species.

Authors:  Moonsuk Kim; Kyoung Ho Song; Chung Jong Kim; Pyoeng Gyun Choe; Wan Beom Park; Ji Hwan Bang; Eu Suk Kim; Sang Won Park; Nam Joong Kim; Myoung Don Oh; Hong Bin Kim
Journal:  J Korean Med Sci       Date:  2019-04-15       Impact factor: 2.153

8.  Urinary tract infection pathogens and antimicrobial susceptibilities in Kobe, Japan and Taipei, Taiwan: an international analysis.

Authors:  Chiang Yi-Te; Katsumi Shigemura; Kento Nishimoto; Naoki Yamada; Koichi Kitagawa; Shian-Ying Sung; Kuan-Chou Chen; Masato Fujisawa
Journal:  J Int Med Res       Date:  2019-09-12       Impact factor: 1.671

9.  Trends in prevalence of extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Escherichia coli isolated from patients with community- and healthcare-associated bacteriuria: results from 2014 to 2020 in an urban safety-net healthcare system.

Authors:  Eva Raphael; M Maria Glymour; Henry F Chambers
Journal:  Antimicrob Resist Infect Control       Date:  2021-08-11       Impact factor: 4.887

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