Profiling of bacterial bloodstream infections in hematological and oncological patients based on a comparative survival analysis

被引:0
|
作者
Sarah Weber
Aaron Magh
Michael Hogardt
Volkhard A. J. Kempf
Maria J. G. T. Vehreschild
Hubert Serve
Sebastian Scheich
Björn Steffen
机构
[1] University Hospital Frankfurt,Department of Medicine, Hematology/Oncology
[2] University Hospital Frankfurt,University Center for Infectious Diseases
[3] University Hospital Frankfurt,Institute of Medical Microbiology and Infection Control
[4] University Center of Competence for Infection Control,Department of Medicine, Infectious Diseases Unit
[5] University Hospital Frankfurt,undefined
[6] German Center for Infection Research (DZIF),undefined
来源
Annals of Hematology | 2021年 / 100卷
关键词
Bloodstream infection; Hematology; Oncology; Cancer; Cluster;
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学科分类号
摘要
Bloodstream infections (BSI) are a frequent complication in patients with hematological and oncological diseases. However, the impact of different bacterial species causing BSI and of multiple BSI remains incompletely understood. We performed a retrospective study profiling 637 bacterial BSI episodes in hematological and oncological patients. Based on the 30-day (30d) overall survival (OS), we analyzed different types of multiple BSI and grouped BSI-associated bacteria into clusters followed by further assessment of clinical and infection-related characteristics. We discovered that polymicrobial BSI (different organisms on the first day of a BSI episode) and sequential BSI (another BSI before the respective BSI episode) were associated with a worse 30d OS. Different bacterial groups could be classified into three BSI outcome clusters based on 30d OS: favorable (FAV) including mainly common skin contaminants, Escherichia spp. and Streptococcus spp.; intermediate (INT) including mainly Enterococcus spp., vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus spp., and multidrug-resistant gram-negative bacteria (MDRGN); and adverse (ADV) including MDRGN with an additional carbapenem-resistance (MDRGN+CR). A polymicrobial or sequential BSI especially influenced the outcome in the combination of two INT cluster BSI. The presence of a polymicrobial BSI and the assignment into the BSI outcome clusters were identified as independent risk factors for 30d mortality in a Cox multivariate regression analysis. The assignment to a BSI outcome cluster and the differentiated perspective of multiple BSI open new insights into the prognosis of patients with BSI and should be further validated in other patient cohorts.
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页码:1593 / 1602
页数:9
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