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Antibiotic Susceptibility, Virulome, and Clinical Outcomes in European Infants with Bloodstream Infections Caused by Enterobacterales

Mortality in neonates with Gram-negative bloodstream infections has remained unacceptably high. Very few data are available on the impact of resistance profiles, virulence factors, appropriateness of empirical treatment and clinical characteristics on patients’ mortality. A survival analysis to inve...

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Autores principales: Folgori, Laura, Di Carlo, Domenico, Comandatore, Francesco, Piazza, Aurora, Witney, Adam A., Bresesti, Ilia, Hsia, Yingfen, Laing, Kenneth, Monahan, Irene, Bielicki, Julia, Alvaro, Alessandro, Zuccotti, Gian Vincenzo, Planche, Tim, Heath, Paul T., Sharland, Mike
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8230887/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34208220
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10060706
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author Folgori, Laura
Di Carlo, Domenico
Comandatore, Francesco
Piazza, Aurora
Witney, Adam A.
Bresesti, Ilia
Hsia, Yingfen
Laing, Kenneth
Monahan, Irene
Bielicki, Julia
Alvaro, Alessandro
Zuccotti, Gian Vincenzo
Planche, Tim
Heath, Paul T.
Sharland, Mike
author_facet Folgori, Laura
Di Carlo, Domenico
Comandatore, Francesco
Piazza, Aurora
Witney, Adam A.
Bresesti, Ilia
Hsia, Yingfen
Laing, Kenneth
Monahan, Irene
Bielicki, Julia
Alvaro, Alessandro
Zuccotti, Gian Vincenzo
Planche, Tim
Heath, Paul T.
Sharland, Mike
author_sort Folgori, Laura
collection PubMed
description Mortality in neonates with Gram-negative bloodstream infections has remained unacceptably high. Very few data are available on the impact of resistance profiles, virulence factors, appropriateness of empirical treatment and clinical characteristics on patients’ mortality. A survival analysis to investigate 28-day mortality probability and predictors was performed including (I) infants <90 days (II) with an available Enterobacterales blood isolate with (III) clinical, treatment and 28-day outcome data. Eighty-seven patients were included. Overall, 299 virulence genes were identified among all the pathogens. Escherichia coli had significantly more virulence genes identified compared with other species. A strong positive correlation between the number of resistance and virulence genes carried by each isolate was found. The cumulative probability of death obtained by the Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was 19.5%. In the descriptive analysis, early age at onset, gestational age at onset, culture positive for E. coli and number of classes of virulence genes carried by each isolate were significantly associated with mortality. By Cox multivariate regression, none of the investigated variables was significant. This pilot study has demonstrated the feasibility of investigating the association between neonatal sepsis mortality and the causative Enterobacterales isolates virulome. This relationship needs further exploration in larger studies, ideally including host immunopathological response, in order to develop a tailor-made therapeutic strategy.
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spelling pubmed-82308872021-06-26 Antibiotic Susceptibility, Virulome, and Clinical Outcomes in European Infants with Bloodstream Infections Caused by Enterobacterales Folgori, Laura Di Carlo, Domenico Comandatore, Francesco Piazza, Aurora Witney, Adam A. Bresesti, Ilia Hsia, Yingfen Laing, Kenneth Monahan, Irene Bielicki, Julia Alvaro, Alessandro Zuccotti, Gian Vincenzo Planche, Tim Heath, Paul T. Sharland, Mike Antibiotics (Basel) Article Mortality in neonates with Gram-negative bloodstream infections has remained unacceptably high. Very few data are available on the impact of resistance profiles, virulence factors, appropriateness of empirical treatment and clinical characteristics on patients’ mortality. A survival analysis to investigate 28-day mortality probability and predictors was performed including (I) infants <90 days (II) with an available Enterobacterales blood isolate with (III) clinical, treatment and 28-day outcome data. Eighty-seven patients were included. Overall, 299 virulence genes were identified among all the pathogens. Escherichia coli had significantly more virulence genes identified compared with other species. A strong positive correlation between the number of resistance and virulence genes carried by each isolate was found. The cumulative probability of death obtained by the Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was 19.5%. In the descriptive analysis, early age at onset, gestational age at onset, culture positive for E. coli and number of classes of virulence genes carried by each isolate were significantly associated with mortality. By Cox multivariate regression, none of the investigated variables was significant. This pilot study has demonstrated the feasibility of investigating the association between neonatal sepsis mortality and the causative Enterobacterales isolates virulome. This relationship needs further exploration in larger studies, ideally including host immunopathological response, in order to develop a tailor-made therapeutic strategy. MDPI 2021-06-11 /pmc/articles/PMC8230887/ /pubmed/34208220 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10060706 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Folgori, Laura
Di Carlo, Domenico
Comandatore, Francesco
Piazza, Aurora
Witney, Adam A.
Bresesti, Ilia
Hsia, Yingfen
Laing, Kenneth
Monahan, Irene
Bielicki, Julia
Alvaro, Alessandro
Zuccotti, Gian Vincenzo
Planche, Tim
Heath, Paul T.
Sharland, Mike
Antibiotic Susceptibility, Virulome, and Clinical Outcomes in European Infants with Bloodstream Infections Caused by Enterobacterales
title Antibiotic Susceptibility, Virulome, and Clinical Outcomes in European Infants with Bloodstream Infections Caused by Enterobacterales
title_full Antibiotic Susceptibility, Virulome, and Clinical Outcomes in European Infants with Bloodstream Infections Caused by Enterobacterales
title_fullStr Antibiotic Susceptibility, Virulome, and Clinical Outcomes in European Infants with Bloodstream Infections Caused by Enterobacterales
title_full_unstemmed Antibiotic Susceptibility, Virulome, and Clinical Outcomes in European Infants with Bloodstream Infections Caused by Enterobacterales
title_short Antibiotic Susceptibility, Virulome, and Clinical Outcomes in European Infants with Bloodstream Infections Caused by Enterobacterales
title_sort antibiotic susceptibility, virulome, and clinical outcomes in european infants with bloodstream infections caused by enterobacterales
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8230887/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34208220
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10060706
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