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1685. Epidemiological and microbiological characteristics of S. aureus pediatric infections in Colombia 2018-2022, a National Multicenter Study: Staphylored Colombia

BACKGROUND: Staphylococcus aureus infections are a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Staphylored Colombia is a research network across various regions of Colombia. The present study aimed to describe the epidemiological and microbiological characteristics of S. aureus infections in p...

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Autores principales: Gutierrez-Tobar, Ivan Felipe, Carvajal, Cristobal, Vásquez, Pablo, Camacho, Jhon, Andrade-Fernandez, Joam C, Londono-Ruiz, Juan Pablo, Díaz, Alejandro, Mariño, Cristina, Luengas, Miguel, Hernandez, Derly, Toro, Jessica F, Niño, Angela, Patiño, Jaime, Pérez, Paola, Sandoval, Lina, Vivas, Rosalba, Calle, Juan, Cabeza, Nancy, Lopez, Eduardo, Bustos, Mario, Rodríguez, Yazmin, Araque, Paula, Beltran, María, Galvis, Diego, Lopez, Juan, Camacho, German, Jaimes, Mayra, Beltran, Claudia, Gonzalez, Natalia, Reyes, Jinnethe, Camacho, Denisse, Chaucanes, Yamile, Garces, carlos, Arias, Cesar A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10677092/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.1518
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author Gutierrez-Tobar, Ivan Felipe
Carvajal, Cristobal
Vásquez, Pablo
Camacho, Jhon
Andrade-Fernandez, Joam C
Londono-Ruiz, Juan Pablo
Díaz, Alejandro
Mariño, Cristina
Luengas, Miguel
Hernandez, Derly
Toro, Jessica F
Niño, Angela
Patiño, Jaime
Pérez, Paola
Sandoval, Lina
Vivas, Rosalba
Calle, Juan
Cabeza, Nancy
Lopez, Eduardo
Bustos, Mario
Rodríguez, Yazmin
Araque, Paula
Beltran, María
Galvis, Diego
Lopez, Juan
Camacho, German
Jaimes, Mayra
Beltran, Claudia
Gonzalez, Natalia
Reyes, Jinnethe
Camacho, Denisse
Chaucanes, Yamile
Garces, carlos
Arias, Cesar A
author_facet Gutierrez-Tobar, Ivan Felipe
Carvajal, Cristobal
Vásquez, Pablo
Camacho, Jhon
Andrade-Fernandez, Joam C
Londono-Ruiz, Juan Pablo
Díaz, Alejandro
Mariño, Cristina
Luengas, Miguel
Hernandez, Derly
Toro, Jessica F
Niño, Angela
Patiño, Jaime
Pérez, Paola
Sandoval, Lina
Vivas, Rosalba
Calle, Juan
Cabeza, Nancy
Lopez, Eduardo
Bustos, Mario
Rodríguez, Yazmin
Araque, Paula
Beltran, María
Galvis, Diego
Lopez, Juan
Camacho, German
Jaimes, Mayra
Beltran, Claudia
Gonzalez, Natalia
Reyes, Jinnethe
Camacho, Denisse
Chaucanes, Yamile
Garces, carlos
Arias, Cesar A
author_sort Gutierrez-Tobar, Ivan Felipe
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Staphylococcus aureus infections are a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Staphylored Colombia is a research network across various regions of Colombia. The present study aimed to describe the epidemiological and microbiological characteristics of S. aureus infections in pediatric patients from 2018 to 2021. METHODS: In this retrospective observational study, we analyzed S. aureus isolates from centers reported in WHONET, a WHO software for microbiology management. A S. aureus pediatric infection (“event”) was defined as any culture isolation in an individual who was previously culture negative for at least 2 weeks. We described center characteristics, age distribution, infection type, and antibiotic susceptibilities. Descriptive statistics were used to compare the microbiologic characteristics of meticillin-sensitive (MSSA) and resistant (MRSA) S. aureus isolates. [Figure: see text] Various origins of S. aureus isolates, according to the approach in methodology: by culture, by event, and by patient RESULTS: We included 23 centers from 7 cities. Most of these centers (82.6%) provided care for both adults and children, 52.2% offering oncology services and 82.6% having a PICU (Table 1). A total of 8,157 S. aureus culture isolations were registered, from 5,384 events that occurred in 4,821 patients (Figure 1). Median age was 5 years (range 1-12). The most frequent infection source was blood (26.2%), followed by skin and soft tissue (18.4%). Most of S. aureus isolates remained susceptible to oxacillin (62.1%), clindamycin (85.9%), and TMP-SMX, 91.7%, with minor changes in the antimicrobial resistance overtime (Figure 2). MRSA prevalence varied by city (< 0.001) and was slightly higher in exclusively pediatric hospitals (39.4% vs. 35.7%; p< 0.001), and hospitals with neonatal units (p=0.004). Multiple foci were associated with an increased risk of MRSA (single origin 35.8% vs. three or more origins 56.4%; p< 0.001), particularly in cases of bacteremia (Table 2). [Figure: see text] The different characteristics of the centers are described, as well as the description of S. aureus according to the type of isolation: by culture, event, and patient [Figure: see text] This table compares the SAMS vs SAMR isolates according to the characteristics of the centers and the general type of infection and its origin. [Figure: see text] This graph describes how the resistance to different antibiotics for single events has been from 2018 to 2021 CONCLUSION: Our study, based on WHONET data, suggests that MRSA prevalence varies by region and hospital characteristics. Multifocal involvement and a higher number of infections were associated with an increased frequency of MRSA, particularly in cases of bacteremia. Prospective clinical studies are fundamental and currently ongoing to provide a more comprehensive characterization within the Staphylored LATAM network. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures
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spelling pubmed-106770922023-11-27 1685. Epidemiological and microbiological characteristics of S. aureus pediatric infections in Colombia 2018-2022, a National Multicenter Study: Staphylored Colombia Gutierrez-Tobar, Ivan Felipe Carvajal, Cristobal Vásquez, Pablo Camacho, Jhon Andrade-Fernandez, Joam C Londono-Ruiz, Juan Pablo Díaz, Alejandro Mariño, Cristina Luengas, Miguel Hernandez, Derly Toro, Jessica F Niño, Angela Patiño, Jaime Pérez, Paola Sandoval, Lina Vivas, Rosalba Calle, Juan Cabeza, Nancy Lopez, Eduardo Bustos, Mario Rodríguez, Yazmin Araque, Paula Beltran, María Galvis, Diego Lopez, Juan Camacho, German Jaimes, Mayra Beltran, Claudia Gonzalez, Natalia Reyes, Jinnethe Camacho, Denisse Chaucanes, Yamile Garces, carlos Arias, Cesar A Open Forum Infect Dis Abstract BACKGROUND: Staphylococcus aureus infections are a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Staphylored Colombia is a research network across various regions of Colombia. The present study aimed to describe the epidemiological and microbiological characteristics of S. aureus infections in pediatric patients from 2018 to 2021. METHODS: In this retrospective observational study, we analyzed S. aureus isolates from centers reported in WHONET, a WHO software for microbiology management. A S. aureus pediatric infection (“event”) was defined as any culture isolation in an individual who was previously culture negative for at least 2 weeks. We described center characteristics, age distribution, infection type, and antibiotic susceptibilities. Descriptive statistics were used to compare the microbiologic characteristics of meticillin-sensitive (MSSA) and resistant (MRSA) S. aureus isolates. [Figure: see text] Various origins of S. aureus isolates, according to the approach in methodology: by culture, by event, and by patient RESULTS: We included 23 centers from 7 cities. Most of these centers (82.6%) provided care for both adults and children, 52.2% offering oncology services and 82.6% having a PICU (Table 1). A total of 8,157 S. aureus culture isolations were registered, from 5,384 events that occurred in 4,821 patients (Figure 1). Median age was 5 years (range 1-12). The most frequent infection source was blood (26.2%), followed by skin and soft tissue (18.4%). Most of S. aureus isolates remained susceptible to oxacillin (62.1%), clindamycin (85.9%), and TMP-SMX, 91.7%, with minor changes in the antimicrobial resistance overtime (Figure 2). MRSA prevalence varied by city (< 0.001) and was slightly higher in exclusively pediatric hospitals (39.4% vs. 35.7%; p< 0.001), and hospitals with neonatal units (p=0.004). Multiple foci were associated with an increased risk of MRSA (single origin 35.8% vs. three or more origins 56.4%; p< 0.001), particularly in cases of bacteremia (Table 2). [Figure: see text] The different characteristics of the centers are described, as well as the description of S. aureus according to the type of isolation: by culture, event, and patient [Figure: see text] This table compares the SAMS vs SAMR isolates according to the characteristics of the centers and the general type of infection and its origin. [Figure: see text] This graph describes how the resistance to different antibiotics for single events has been from 2018 to 2021 CONCLUSION: Our study, based on WHONET data, suggests that MRSA prevalence varies by region and hospital characteristics. Multifocal involvement and a higher number of infections were associated with an increased frequency of MRSA, particularly in cases of bacteremia. Prospective clinical studies are fundamental and currently ongoing to provide a more comprehensive characterization within the Staphylored LATAM network. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures Oxford University Press 2023-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10677092/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.1518 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstract
Gutierrez-Tobar, Ivan Felipe
Carvajal, Cristobal
Vásquez, Pablo
Camacho, Jhon
Andrade-Fernandez, Joam C
Londono-Ruiz, Juan Pablo
Díaz, Alejandro
Mariño, Cristina
Luengas, Miguel
Hernandez, Derly
Toro, Jessica F
Niño, Angela
Patiño, Jaime
Pérez, Paola
Sandoval, Lina
Vivas, Rosalba
Calle, Juan
Cabeza, Nancy
Lopez, Eduardo
Bustos, Mario
Rodríguez, Yazmin
Araque, Paula
Beltran, María
Galvis, Diego
Lopez, Juan
Camacho, German
Jaimes, Mayra
Beltran, Claudia
Gonzalez, Natalia
Reyes, Jinnethe
Camacho, Denisse
Chaucanes, Yamile
Garces, carlos
Arias, Cesar A
1685. Epidemiological and microbiological characteristics of S. aureus pediatric infections in Colombia 2018-2022, a National Multicenter Study: Staphylored Colombia
title 1685. Epidemiological and microbiological characteristics of S. aureus pediatric infections in Colombia 2018-2022, a National Multicenter Study: Staphylored Colombia
title_full 1685. Epidemiological and microbiological characteristics of S. aureus pediatric infections in Colombia 2018-2022, a National Multicenter Study: Staphylored Colombia
title_fullStr 1685. Epidemiological and microbiological characteristics of S. aureus pediatric infections in Colombia 2018-2022, a National Multicenter Study: Staphylored Colombia
title_full_unstemmed 1685. Epidemiological and microbiological characteristics of S. aureus pediatric infections in Colombia 2018-2022, a National Multicenter Study: Staphylored Colombia
title_short 1685. Epidemiological and microbiological characteristics of S. aureus pediatric infections in Colombia 2018-2022, a National Multicenter Study: Staphylored Colombia
title_sort 1685. epidemiological and microbiological characteristics of s. aureus pediatric infections in colombia 2018-2022, a national multicenter study: staphylored colombia
topic Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10677092/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.1518
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