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Title: | Association of Empiric Antibiotic Regimen Discordance With 30-Day Mortality in Neonatal and Pediatric Bloodstream Infection-A Global Retrospective Cohort Study | Authors: | Cook, Aislinn Hsia, Yingfen Russell, Neal Sharland, Mike Cheung, Kaman Grimwood, Keith Cross, Jack Cotrim da Cunha, Denise Magalhães, Gloria Regina Renk, Hanna Hindocha, Avni McMaster, Paddy Okomo, Uduak Darboe, Saffiatou Alvarez-Uria, Gerardo Jinka, Dasaratha R Murki, Srinivas Kandraju, Hemasree Dharmapalan, Dhanya Esposito, Susanna Bianchini, Sonia Fukuoka, Kahoru Aizawa, Yuta Jimenez-Juarez, Rodolfo Norberto Ojeda-Diezbarroso, Karla Pirš, Mateja Rožič, Mojca Anugulruengkitt, Suvaporn Jantarabenjakul, Watsamon Cheng, Ching-Lan Jian, Bai-Xiu Spyridakis, Evangelos Zaoutis, Theoklis Bielicki, Julia |
Issue Date: | Feb-2021 | Publisher: | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins | Source: | Cook A, Hsia Y, Russell N, Sharland M, Cheung K, Grimwood K, Cross J, Cotrim da Cunha D, Magalhães GR, Renk H, Hindocha A, McMaster P, Okomo U, Darboe S, Alvarez-Uria G, Jinka DR, Murki S, Kandraju H, Dharmapalan D, Esposito S, Bianchini S, Fukuoka K, Aizawa Y, Jimenez-Juarez RN, Ojeda-Diezbarroso K, Pirš M, Rožič M, Anugulruengkitt S, Jantarabenjakul W, Cheng CL, Jian BX, Spyridakis E, Zaoutis T, Bielicki J. Association of Empiric Antibiotic Regimen Discordance With 30-Day Mortality in Neonatal and Pediatric Bloodstream Infection-A Global Retrospective Cohort Study. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2021 Feb 1;40(2):137-143. doi: 10.1097/INF.0000000000002910 | Journal: | The Pediatric infectious disease journal | Abstract: | While there have been studies in adults reporting discordant empiric antibiotic treatment associated with poor outcomes, this area is relatively unexplored in children and neonates despite evidence of increasing resistance to recommended first-line treatment regimens. Patient characteristics, antibiotic treatment, microbiology, and 30-day all-cause outcome from children <18 years with blood-culture-confirmed bacterial bloodstream infections (BSI) were collected anonymously using REDCap™ through the Global Antibiotic Prescribing and Resistance in Neonates and Children network from February 2016 to February 2017. Concordance of early empiric antibiotic treatment was determined using European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing interpretive guidelines. The relationship between concordance of empiric regimen and 30-day mortality was investigated using multivariable regression. Four hundred fifty-two children with blood-culture-positive BSI receiving early empiric antibiotics were reported by 25 hospitals in 19 countries. Sixty percent (273/452) were under the age of 2 years. S. aureus, E. coli, and Klebsiella spp. were the most common isolates, and there were 158 unique empiric regimens prescribed. Fifteen percent (69/452) of patients received a discordant regimen, and 7.7% (35/452) died. Six percent (23/383) of patients with concordant regimen died compared with 17.4% (12/69) of patients with discordant regimen. Adjusting for age, sex, presence of comorbidity, unit type, hospital-acquired infections, and Gram stain, the odds of 30-day mortality were 2.9 (95% confidence interval: 1.2-7.0; P = 0.015) for patients receiving discordant early empiric antibiotics. Odds of mortality in confirmed pediatric BSI are nearly 3-fold higher for patients receiving a discordant early empiric antibiotic regimen. The impact of improved concordance of early empiric treatment on mortality, particularly in critically ill patients, needs further evaluation. | DOI: | 10.1097/inf.0000000000002910 | Keywords: | antibiotics;Anti-Bacterial Agents;Bacterial Infections;Children | Type: | Article |
Appears in Sites: | Gold Coast Health Publications |
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