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1527. Clinical Variables Associated with Vancomycin Resistance in Children with Bacteremia Due to Enterococcus spp.

BACKGROUND: Enterococcus spp. (E) is an important cause of nosocomial bacteremia. The emergence of vancomycin-resistant E in the nosocomial setting conditions the empirical treatment and limits therapeutic options. METHODS: A retrospective cohort study of children ≥1 month with E bacteremia in a ref...

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Autores principales: Jimena, Carla, Mussini, Soledad, Taicz, Moira, Paula Arias, Ana, Perez, Guadalupe, Reijtman, Vanesa, Mastroianni, Alejandra, Ines Sormani, Maria, Garcia, Eva, Teresa Rosanova, Maria, Bologna, Rosa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6809436/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.1391
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author Jimena, Carla
Mussini, Soledad
Taicz, Moira
Paula Arias, Ana
Perez, Guadalupe
Reijtman, Vanesa
Mastroianni, Alejandra
Ines Sormani, Maria
Garcia, Eva
Teresa Rosanova, Maria
Bologna, Rosa
author_facet Jimena, Carla
Mussini, Soledad
Taicz, Moira
Paula Arias, Ana
Perez, Guadalupe
Reijtman, Vanesa
Mastroianni, Alejandra
Ines Sormani, Maria
Garcia, Eva
Teresa Rosanova, Maria
Bologna, Rosa
author_sort Jimena, Carla
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Enterococcus spp. (E) is an important cause of nosocomial bacteremia. The emergence of vancomycin-resistant E in the nosocomial setting conditions the empirical treatment and limits therapeutic options. METHODS: A retrospective cohort study of children ≥1 month with E bacteremia in a reference pediatric hospital was performed. Study period January 1, 2016–December 31, 2018. Outcome: to describe clinical and epidemiological characteristics of children with bacteremia due to Enterococcus spp. resistant to vancomycin (VRE) vs. sensitive (VSE). Identify variables associated with VRE. STATA 13 was used. RESULTS: N = 82 patients. Median age was 37.6 months (IQR 2–48), 45 patients (54.9%) were male; 76 patients (92.7%) had underlying disease (intestinal failure (21.9%), heart disease (17.1%), preterm births (12.2%), hematological disease (10.9%), and liver failure (7.3%); 16 patients (19.5%) received immunosuppressive therapy. Sixty bacteremia (73.2%) were by E. faecalis and 22 (26, 8%) by E. faecium. Vancomycin resistance was documented in 13 patients (15.8%), all of which were E. faecium. In the bivariate analysis, patients with VRE bacteremia were significantly older in months than those with VSE bacteremia [75.4 (IQR 6–151) vs. 30.5 (IQR 2–33), P <0.02]; had more frequency of previous colonization with VRE [n: 8 (61.5%) vs. n: 4 (5.8%) P < 0.001], hematological disease [n: 5 (38.5%) vs. n: 5 (5.8%), P = 0.01], liver failure [n: 3 (23.1%) vs. n: 3 (4.4%), P = 0.02] and immunosuppressive therapy [n: 6 (46.2%) vs. n: 10 (14.5%) P = 0.008]. Patients with VRE bacteremia had a lower median white blood cell count [7040 (IQR 2150–10250) vs. 14474 (IQR 6160–17090), P <0.03]. Mortality in P with VRE was 15.4% (n: 2) and 4.3% in P with VSE (n: 3), P = 0.1. No statistically significant differences were found according to history of surgery, previous hospitalization, antibiotic therapy in the last 3 months or clinical presentation. In the multivariate model, predictors of VRE bacteremia adjusted for the rest of the significant variables were hematological disease OR 11.1 (95% CI 2.3–53.8) P = 0.003, and liver failure OR 7.7 (95% CI 1.2–50.4), P = 0.03. CONCLUSION: In this cohort of children with enterococcal bacteremia, hematological disease and liver failure were predictive variables of VRE bacteremia. DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures.
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spelling pubmed-68094362019-10-28 1527. Clinical Variables Associated with Vancomycin Resistance in Children with Bacteremia Due to Enterococcus spp. Jimena, Carla Mussini, Soledad Taicz, Moira Paula Arias, Ana Perez, Guadalupe Reijtman, Vanesa Mastroianni, Alejandra Ines Sormani, Maria Garcia, Eva Teresa Rosanova, Maria Bologna, Rosa Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: Enterococcus spp. (E) is an important cause of nosocomial bacteremia. The emergence of vancomycin-resistant E in the nosocomial setting conditions the empirical treatment and limits therapeutic options. METHODS: A retrospective cohort study of children ≥1 month with E bacteremia in a reference pediatric hospital was performed. Study period January 1, 2016–December 31, 2018. Outcome: to describe clinical and epidemiological characteristics of children with bacteremia due to Enterococcus spp. resistant to vancomycin (VRE) vs. sensitive (VSE). Identify variables associated with VRE. STATA 13 was used. RESULTS: N = 82 patients. Median age was 37.6 months (IQR 2–48), 45 patients (54.9%) were male; 76 patients (92.7%) had underlying disease (intestinal failure (21.9%), heart disease (17.1%), preterm births (12.2%), hematological disease (10.9%), and liver failure (7.3%); 16 patients (19.5%) received immunosuppressive therapy. Sixty bacteremia (73.2%) were by E. faecalis and 22 (26, 8%) by E. faecium. Vancomycin resistance was documented in 13 patients (15.8%), all of which were E. faecium. In the bivariate analysis, patients with VRE bacteremia were significantly older in months than those with VSE bacteremia [75.4 (IQR 6–151) vs. 30.5 (IQR 2–33), P <0.02]; had more frequency of previous colonization with VRE [n: 8 (61.5%) vs. n: 4 (5.8%) P < 0.001], hematological disease [n: 5 (38.5%) vs. n: 5 (5.8%), P = 0.01], liver failure [n: 3 (23.1%) vs. n: 3 (4.4%), P = 0.02] and immunosuppressive therapy [n: 6 (46.2%) vs. n: 10 (14.5%) P = 0.008]. Patients with VRE bacteremia had a lower median white blood cell count [7040 (IQR 2150–10250) vs. 14474 (IQR 6160–17090), P <0.03]. Mortality in P with VRE was 15.4% (n: 2) and 4.3% in P with VSE (n: 3), P = 0.1. No statistically significant differences were found according to history of surgery, previous hospitalization, antibiotic therapy in the last 3 months or clinical presentation. In the multivariate model, predictors of VRE bacteremia adjusted for the rest of the significant variables were hematological disease OR 11.1 (95% CI 2.3–53.8) P = 0.003, and liver failure OR 7.7 (95% CI 1.2–50.4), P = 0.03. CONCLUSION: In this cohort of children with enterococcal bacteremia, hematological disease and liver failure were predictive variables of VRE bacteremia. DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures. Oxford University Press 2019-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6809436/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.1391 Text en © The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Abstracts
Jimena, Carla
Mussini, Soledad
Taicz, Moira
Paula Arias, Ana
Perez, Guadalupe
Reijtman, Vanesa
Mastroianni, Alejandra
Ines Sormani, Maria
Garcia, Eva
Teresa Rosanova, Maria
Bologna, Rosa
1527. Clinical Variables Associated with Vancomycin Resistance in Children with Bacteremia Due to Enterococcus spp.
title 1527. Clinical Variables Associated with Vancomycin Resistance in Children with Bacteremia Due to Enterococcus spp.
title_full 1527. Clinical Variables Associated with Vancomycin Resistance in Children with Bacteremia Due to Enterococcus spp.
title_fullStr 1527. Clinical Variables Associated with Vancomycin Resistance in Children with Bacteremia Due to Enterococcus spp.
title_full_unstemmed 1527. Clinical Variables Associated with Vancomycin Resistance in Children with Bacteremia Due to Enterococcus spp.
title_short 1527. Clinical Variables Associated with Vancomycin Resistance in Children with Bacteremia Due to Enterococcus spp.
title_sort 1527. clinical variables associated with vancomycin resistance in children with bacteremia due to enterococcus spp.
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6809436/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.1391
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