We assessed the success rate of vancomycin catheter lock therapy (VLT) in combination with systemic antimicrobials in patients with staphylococcal catheter‐related bloodstream infection (C‐RBSI). ...Over a 6‐year period, we retrospectively collected clinical and microbiological data from patients with long‐term central venous catheters and staphylococcal C‐RBSI who were treated with systemic antimicrobials and VLT. We then assessed the success rate of VLT based on two criteria: 1) catheter retention time> 3 months and 2) catheter in place until end of use. We found 217 staphylococcal C‐RBSI episodes, 115 (53.0%) of which were managed with conservative therapy. Of these, 76 (66.1%) were treated with VLT (85.5% coagulase‐negative staphylococci and 14.5% Staphylococcus aureus). The success rate of VLT was 42.1% with criterion 1 and 71.1% with criterion 2. We did not find statistically significant differences between success and failure in the majority of the clinical data recorded. We only found differences for crude mortality in criterion 1 and for parenteral nutrition in criterion 2. The success of catheter retention using VLT was moderate, reaching slightly more than 70% when the catheter was kept in place until the end of use.
•Most patients were immunocompromised or had an underlying chronic respiratory disease.•Nodules and cavitation were frequently present.•The most frequent species were Nocardia cyriacigeorgica, N. ...abscessus, and N. farcinica.•Most Nocardia isolates were susceptible to linezolid, amikacin, and trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole.•Mortality was associated with systemic corticosteroids.
To analyse all cases of Nocardia pneumonia occurring between 2010 and 2016 in five Spanish hospitals.
This was a retrospective observational analysis of clinical and microbiological data collected from 55 cases of Nocardia pneumonia.
There were one to 20 cases per hospital and six to nine cases per year. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, bronchiectasis, and asthma were the main predisposing underlying respiratory conditions. Thirty-four patients were receiving systemic and/or inhaled corticosteroids prior to infection, eight had neoplasia, and six had haematological malignancies. Clinical and radiological findings were common to pneumonia of other infectious aetiologies, except for the frequent presence of nodules and cavitation. Overall, the 1-year mortality was high (38.2%), and mortality was directly related to the pulmonary disease in 15 patients (27.3%). The most frequently identified species were N. cyriacigeorgica (n=21), N. abscessus (n=8), and N. farcinica (n=5). All Nocardia isolates were susceptible to linezolid and all but two were susceptible to amikacin and trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole.
Nocardia pneumonia-associated mortality remains high, probably because of the debilitated status of patients in whom this pathogen is able to cause pulmonary infection.
•Nocardiosis mainly affects elderly patients with chronic respiratory conditions and those under corticosteroid treatment.•Infections in HIV and solid organ transplantation patients have practically ...disappeared.•Nocardiosis most commonly affects the lungs.•Nocardiosis caused by N. farcinica is apparently a risk factor for poor clinical outcome.
To analyse relevant changes in incidence, clinical and microbiological characteristics of nocardiosis over the last 24 years at the current institution.
The clinical records of patients with nocardiosis (2006–2018) were reviewed and then compared with a previous cohort (1995–2006). Nocardia isolates were identified by 5’-end-16S-rRNA-gene-PCR targeting the first 500 bp of the gene and sequencing. Susceptibility tests were determined by broth microdilution (CLSI guidelines).
Forty-two patients (64.3% male) with nocardiosis were evaluated in the recent cohort: 51.2% had COPD, 43.9% were on corticosteroid therapy and 31.7% had cancer. The incidence of nocardiosis varied from 6.3 to 7.1/100,000 admissions (p = 0.62). There was a decrease in HIV patients (27% vs. 4.9%, p = 0.01) and solid organ transplantation (SOT) recipients (18.9% vs. 2 .4%, p = 0.01). Cases with pulmonary involvement had increased (70.3% vs. 90.5%, p = 0.04). Nocardia species were similar but the most common were N. cyriacigeorgica (32.4% vs. 40.5%, p = 0.49) and N. farcinica (24.3% vs. 14.3%, p = 0.39). Antibiotic resistance remained stable: cotrimoxazole (10.8% vs. 5.7%, p = 0.68), imipenem (5.4% vs. 5.6%, p = 1.0); amikacin and linezolid were 100% active. No differences were found in breakthrough nocardiosis (21.6% vs. 9.8%, p = 0.21) or related mortality (21.6% vs. 21.4%, p = 1.0). The multivariate analysis confirmed that nocardiosis caused by N. farcinica is a risk factor for poor outcome (p = 0.045).
Nocardiosis incidence has remained stable. It mainly affected elderly patients with chronic respiratory conditions and those on corticosteroid treatment. Infections in HIV and SOT patients have practically disappeared. Pulmonary involvement remains the most common area to be affected. Nocardiosis caused by N. farcinica is apparently a risk factor for poor clinical outcome.
Background
Data on the incidence, etiology, and prognosis of non–ventilator‐associated pneumonia in hospitalized patients with solid tumors are scarce. We aimed to study the characteristics of ...non–ventilator‐associated pneumonia in hospitalized patients with solid tumors.
Materials and Methods
This was a prospective noninterventional cohort study of pneumonia in patients hospitalized in an oncology ward in a tertiary teaching hospital. Pneumonia was defined according to the American Thoracic Society criteria. Patients were followed for 1 month after diagnosis or until discharge. Survivors were compared with nonsurvivors.
Results
A total of 132 episodes of pneumonia were diagnosed over 1 year (9.8% of admissions to the oncology ward). They were health care–related (67.4%) or hospital‐acquired pneumonia (31.8%). Lung cancer was the most common malignancy. An etiology was established in 48/132 episodes (36.4%). Knowing the etiology led to changes in antimicrobial therapy in 58.3%. Subsequent intensive care unit admission was required in 10.6% and was linked to inappropriate empirical therapy. Ten‐day mortality was 24.2% and was significantly associated with hypoxia (odds ratio OR, 2.1). Thirty‐day mortality was 46.2%. The independent risk factors for 30‐day mortality were hypoxia (OR, 3.3), hospital acquisition (OR, 3.1), and a performance status >1 (OR, 2.6). Only 40% of patients who died within 30 days were terminally ill.
Conclusion
Pneumonia is a highly prevalent condition in hospitalized patients with solid tumors, even with nonterminal disease. Etiology is diverse, and poor outcome is linked to inappropriate empirical therapy. Efforts to get the empirical therapy right and reach an etiological diagnosis to subsequently de‐escalate are warranted.
Implications for Practice
The present study shows that pneumonia is a prevalent infectious complication in patients admitted to oncology wards, with a very high mortality, even in non–terminally ill patients. Etiology is diverse, and etiological diagnosis is reached in fewer than 40% of cases in nonintubated patients. Intensive care unit admission, a marker of poor outcome, is associated with inappropriate empirical therapy. These results suggest that, to improve prognosis, a more precise and appropriate antimicrobial empirical therapy for pneumonia in patients with solid tumors is necessary, together with an effort to reach an etiological diagnosis to facilitate subsequent de‐escalation.
Pneumonia is a complication in patients admitted to oncology wards, but data on incidence, etiology, and prognosis is lacking. This articles reports on characteristics of nonventilator‐associated pneumonia in hospitalized patients with solid tumors.
We report the first case of disseminated infection by Gymnascella hyalinospora in a solid organ transplant recipient. This case highlights the role of low‐virulence environmental molds as an emerging ...cause of breakthrough invasive fungal infection in immunocompromised hosts. Nosocomial strategies of infection control including antimicrobial stewardship and advances on fast diagnostic methods are strongly encouraged to improve patient prognosis.
The COVID-19 pandemic increased catheter-related bloodstream infections (C-RBSI), but its subsequent impact has not been adequately described. Our hospital has already depicted the effects of the ...COVID-19 pandemic in the first wave. However, we still do not know whether C-RBSI rates and aetiology are similar to those described before the COVID-19 pandemic. We aimed to evaluate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the evolution of C-RBSI in a large tertiary teaching hospital two years later.
We prospectively collected all confirmed C-RBSI episodes in a clinical microbiology laboratory database by matching blood cultures and catheter tip cultures with the isolation of the same microorganism (s). We compared our C-RBSI incidence rates and aetiology from 2018 to 2023. C-RBSI was defined as bacteremia or fungemia in a patient with clinical manifestations of infection and no other apparent source except the catheter.
During the study period, we collected 556 C-RBSI episodes. C-RBSI incidence rate per 1000 admissions each year was as follows: 2018: 2.2; 2019: 1.7; 2020: 3.29; 2021: 2.92; 2022: 2.69. and 2023: 2.01. Mainly, C-RBSI episodes occurring in critical care units each year were, respectively: 2018: 57 (54.8 %), 2019: 38 (45.2 %), 2020: 89 (63.6 %), 2021: 69 (60.5 %), 2022: 58 (50.9 %) and 2023 (61.4 %). The distribution of microorganisms showed an increase in Gram-negative episodes after the pandemic.
Our study shows an increase in the incidence rate of C-RBSI during the COVID-19 pandemic, with a discrete decrease after that. C-RBSI episodes were mainly caused by coagulase-negative Staphylococci but with a rise in Gram-negative bacilli.
Background. Escherichia coli commonly causes catheter-related bloodstream infection (C-RBSI) in specific populations. The differential time to positivity (DTTP) technique is the recommended ...conservative procedure for diagnosing C-RBSIs. Methods. We conducted a retrospective study of episodes in which E. coli was isolated from catheter lumens obtained using the DTTP technique. Microbiological and clinical data were obtained based on the DTTP technique as either catheter colonization, C-RBSI, or non-C-RBSI. Results. A total of 89 catheter blood cultures were included, classified as follows: catheter colonization, 33.7%; C-RBSI, 9.0%; and non-C-RBSI, 57.3%. Only 15.7% of the catheters were withdrawn, with no positive catheter-tip cultures. We found no statistically significant differences in catheter type, antibiotic treatment, or clinical outcome among the groups, except for the frequency of catheter lock therapy or in the frequency of successful treatment. Mortality was associated with C-RBSI in only one patient. Conclusion. E. coli bacteremia diagnosed by the DTTP technique was classified as non-catheter-related in most patients. As the majority of the catheters were retained, E. coli bacteremia could not be microbiologically confirmed as catheter-related by the catheter-tip culture. Future studies are needed to assess the profitability of the DTTP technique for diagnosing E. coli C-RBSIs.
pneumonia (PJP) in immunocompromised patients entails high mortality and requires adequate laboratory diagnosis. We compared the performance of a real time-PCR assay against the immunofluorescence ...assay (IFA) in the routine of a large microbiology laboratory. Different respiratory samples from HIV and non-HIV-infected patients were included. The retrospective analysis used data from September 2015 to April 2018, which included all samples for which a
test was requested. A total of 299 respiratory samples were tested (bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (
= 181), tracheal aspirate (
= 53) and sputum (
= 65)). Forty-eight (16.1%) patients fulfilled the criteria for PJP. Five positive samples (10%) had only colonization. The PCR test was found to have a sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) of 96%, 98%, 90% and 99%, compared to 27%, 100%, 100% and 87%, for the IFA, respectively. PJ-PCR sensitivity and specificity were >80% and >90% for all tested respiratory samples. Median cycle threshold values in definite PJP cases were 30 versus 37 in colonized cases (
< 0.05). Thus, the PCR assay is a robust and reliable test for the diagnosis PJP in all respiratory sample types. Ct values of ≥36 could help to exclude PJP diagnosis.
Malaria is currently the most important human parasitic disease in the world responsible for high morbidity and mortality. Appropriate diagnostic methods are essential for early detection. Microscopy ...examination remains the gold standard, although molecular techniques have higher sensitivity and are very useful in cases of low parasitaemia and mixed infections. The objective of this study was to evaluate a new commercial molecular diagnostic technique.
A prospective, observational, multicentre study was performed between January 2015 and April 2017. All participants were immigrants from malaria-endemic areas, who were divided into two groups: asymptomatic group and symptomatic. Samples from both groups were evaluated by a rapid diagnostic test (ImmunoQuick
Malaria + 4 RDT), microscopy examination, and two commercial molecular malaria tests (FTD Malaria and FTD Malaria Differentiation), then compared against an in-house reference PCR technique.
In all, 250 patients were included: 164 (65.6%) in the asymptomatic group, and 86 (34.4%) in the symptomatic group. There were seven cases of asymptomatic parasitaemia (prevalence = 2.8%) that were detected only by molecular methods. In the symptomatic group, there were seven cases of submicroscopic malaria. The main species detected was Plasmodium falciparum (96.6%). The commercial molecular technique had higher sensitivity than the other methods (S = 96%) and a high rate of concordance with the in-house reference PCR technique (Kappa score = 0.93).
The molecular techniques, although slower than microscopy, have adequate diagnostic accuracy and are very useful for the detection of P. falciparum in cases with low parasitaemia.
Celotno besedilo
Dostopno za:
DOBA, IZUM, KILJ, NUK, PILJ, PNG, SAZU, SIK, UILJ, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK