Seven-day antibiotic therapy for Enterobacterales bacteremia in high-risk neutropenic patients: toward a new paradigm
Purpose Data on short courses of antibiotic therapy for Enterobacterales bacteremia in high-risk neutropenic patients are limited. The aim of the study was to describe and compare the frequency of bacteremia relapse, 30-day overall and infection-related mortality, Clostridiodes difficile infection a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European journal of clinical microbiology & infectious diseases 2024-09, Vol.43 (9), p.1741-1751 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose
Data on short courses of antibiotic therapy for Enterobacterales bacteremia in high-risk neutropenic patients are limited. The aim of the study was to describe and compare the frequency of bacteremia relapse, 30-day overall and infection-related mortality,
Clostridiodes difficile
infection and length of hospital stay since bacteremia among those who received antibiotic therapy for 7 or 14 days.
Methods
This is a multicenter, prospective, observational cohort study in adult high-risk neutropenic patients with hematologic malignancies or hematopoietic stem cell transplant and monomicrobial Enterobacterales bacteremia. They received appropriate empirical antibiotic therapy, had a clinical response within 7 days, and infection source control. Clinical, epidemiological and outcomes variables were compared based on 7 or 14 days of AT.
Results
Two hundred patients were included (100, 7-day antibiotic therapy; 100, 14-day antibiotic therapy).
Escherichia coli
was the pathogen most frequently isolated (47.5%), followed by
Klebsiella
sp
.
(40.5%). Among those patients that received 7-day vs. 14-day antibiotic course, a clinical source of bacteremia was found in 54% vs. 57% (
p
= 0.66), multidrug-resistant Enterobacterales isolates in 28% vs. 30% (
p
= 0.75), and 40% vs. 47% (
p
= 0.31) received combined empirical antibiotic therapy. Overall mortality was 3% vs. 1% (
p
= 0.62), in no case related to infection; bacteremia relapse was 7% vs. 2% (
p
= 0.17), and length of hospital stay since bacteremia had a median of 9 days (IQR: 7–15) vs. 14 days (IQR: 13–22) (
p
= |
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ISSN: | 0934-9723 1435-4373 1435-4373 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10096-024-04885-w |