Differences in the Distribution of Species, Carbapenemases, Sequence Types, Antimicrobial Heteroresistance and Mortality Rates Between Pediatric and Adult Carbapenemase-Producing Enterobacterales in Bloodstream Infections

The dissemination of carbapenemase-producing (CPE) is worrisome given their scarce treatment options. CPE bloodstream infections (BSIs) had a high mortality rate in adults, and there was little data on pediatric CPE-BSIs around the world. We comprehensively explored the differences in the clinical a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in medicine 2022-03, Vol.9, p.827474-827474
Hauptverfasser: Yu, Hanbing, Ma, Deyu, Liu, Bo, Yang, Suqing, Lin, Qiuxia, Yu, Renlin, Jia, Xiaojiong, Niu, Siqiang, Zhang, Qun, Huang, Shifeng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The dissemination of carbapenemase-producing (CPE) is worrisome given their scarce treatment options. CPE bloodstream infections (BSIs) had a high mortality rate in adults, and there was little data on pediatric CPE-BSIs around the world. We comprehensively explored the differences in the clinical and microbiological characteristics between pediatric and adult CPE-BSIs. Forty-eight pediatric and 78 adult CPE-BSIs cases were collected. All-cause 30 day-mortality in children with CPE-BSIs (14.6%, 7/48) was significantly lower than that in adult patients (42.3%, 33/78, = 0.001). The subgroup in adults empirically treated with tigecycline as an active drug displayed a significantly higher 30-days crude mortality (63.3%, 19/30) than the subgroup treated without tigecycline (29.2%, 14/48, = 0.003). was the most prevalent species in both the pediatric (45.8%, 22/48) and adult populations (64.1%, 50/78), with discrepant carbapenemase genes in each population: 95.4% (21/22) of the pediatric isolates carried , while 82.0% (41/50) of the adult strains harbored . The ratio of in children (37.5%) was significantly higher than that in adults (12.8%, = 0.002). In both populations, the majority of expressed , particularly . With statistical significance, was much more common in children (95.8%, 46/48) than in adults (34.6%, 27/78). The rate of multiple-heteroresistance phenotypes in children was as high as 87.5%, which was much lower in adults (57.1%). Agar dilution checkboard experiment against one pediatric carbapenemase-producing isolates showed that the combination of amikacin and fosfomycin yielded an additive effect. Overall, was the most common CPE-BSIs pathogen in both populations, with NDM-producing and KPC-producing ST11 being the most prevalent species in children and adults, respectively. was more prevalent in children than in adults, yet was the most common carbapenem-resistant mechanism in in both populations. The wide range of multiple-heteroresistance combination traits found in different pathogen species from different host populations should provide a good foundation for future combination therapy design. Further investigations from more CPE isolates of various species are needed to evaluate the possible partial synergy of the amikacin and fosfomycin combination.
ISSN:2296-858X
2296-858X
DOI:10.3389/fmed.2022.827474